HomeMy WebLinkAbout1971-03-08 - Orange Coast Pilot• OU ' ' I
~
,-• • L • . . ~i ~ ---·· •
I • Frazier. Guarded .
•
I •
For Clay Fight
I•
I • . ' . • r After Lile Th·reat
• , ..
..
j ,, • •
.~ ·,
..
'
"
.
Surrenders in Miami
Boy, 16,HijacksAirliner,
Changes Mind in flight
MIAMI (AP) -A 16-year-old bigb
.aoo1 sophomore today boarded a Na-
tional Airlines jet at ~-1obile. Ala.,
pnsented the stewardess a pistol Instead
of a ticket, and forced the crew to
fly him to Miami, where he surrendered
peacefully,
Thomas Kelly Marston v.·as charged
with aircraft piracy and held by federal
m&rsRals at Miami for return to Mobile. .
·A National spokesman said the youtl'f
suirendered to FBI agents ''without any
trouble" when the 727 landed at Miami
~ortly before noon, EST.
The night ended almost three hours
after FBI agents said the youth boarded
the plane at Mobile, ol'dered 38
passengers and four stewardesses off
and demanded lo be flown to Canada.
~ changed his mind over Tennessee
tif~ allowed the crew lo ny him to
f\1lami . -The only persons aboard with
him, were Capt. Robert Carter. co-pilot
Jack Graham and Flight Engineer Jerry
G<mma. . , .
carter told newsmen at ~fiami the
youth said he wanted to go to Canada
because be was getting bad grades and
his parents were. on his back.
Carter said th boy was very frighten-
ed. "He said ~ just wa~ to get
out of Mobile. vie told him If he would
Jet~ us return hjm there, it would go
Orulf e
Weather
The fog wUI roll .in along the
coast tonigh~ giving way to sunny
skies on Tuesday, with tempera·
tures ranglnf rrom 62 locally to
iO further inland.
INSIDf: TODAY
A fertilizer plant isn'e the
proper place to turn up your
nose when pffered a guided
tour. ai leaH in Huntington
Beach. See ilory. Page J 4.
... ,.... ff'
C11lfel'Rlt I
Cl'lw-IH Ue 7 c1 .. ai11t11 u .n
C-k• 11
C!'9HMN 11
0..lfl Nltlcn II
lllllltrlfl ..... '
ll11tt1111nm1~t 11
ltl11111C1 n.21
Mf'"'911f 1•
... lflMttn 1•
'
easier on him. He told us Mobilt was
,the la1l place he Wanted to go."
Carter said be soon became confident
he could talk· the boy inte changing
bis mind.
"We kept talking.'' be said, "and when
we were over Knoxville I told him that
anytime he decided to change his mind,
just Jet us know. I turned around and
looked at him and be banded me his
gun."
At Mobile, Marston's father. Merrill
H. Marston, sa id his son had gotten
up ·and left home for scbOol at 6 a.m.
"Much earlier than usual." He said his
so n.was an average student but declined
to discuss the morning's events.
The boy was wearing his school clothes,
a beige jacket aild blue shirt when
he boarded the plane. authorities said.
They also said the 5-foot-9, 150-poond
youth was armed w I th a .38-caliber,
chrome-plated pistol.
Although Capl Carter said Marston
told him he didn't have any problems
with a broken romance, airport police
said the yot1th was accompanied to the
Mobilt airport by an attractive girl.
They taaid the couple started toward
the boirding ramp, stopped and appeared to argue. Then the girl turned and ran
throug• the gate while the youth boarded
the pllip.e, they said.
At Uµit point, officials said, -a, pulled
a Pistol and forcetf !ltewardess Barbara
Avery to take him into the cockpit
where !he demanded that he be flow n
,to Canada.
He ~rmitted everybody but three
crewmii to get on the plane. Those
who S"t.1Yed with him during the flight
were thi pilot, copilot and flight engineer.
The qigbt, National 475, originated at
Penu~, . Fla. It stopped at Mobile
and w• scheduled to · t'Ontinue on to
New Ot1eans.
WitDe¥'s said the. hijacker wis among
21 perms who boarded the plane ·at
Mobil.e. Jlbey said ht bunted Without
a tickeF and carried a boot and a
brown ~aper bag. He was de.scribed
as being·very nervous.
I
Caneer Funds oSQar.
NEW YORK (AP) -The Amerlcon
Cancer Society 11y1 it received 1 record
total of 165,246,191 In contrlhullons durln& mo.
The funds were used to support a
variety of. programa lncludln1 223 clinical
fellowships for c1ncer research in
medicine and dentistry and 21111,000 dlf-
leren( educatJon proif'ama, the ACS said.
'
Actlvbt
Actress Jane Fonda tells news
conference ''civil disobedience"
is needed as she announces
May anti·war offensive to close
nation's capital. See story on
Page seven.
'S pecific War'
Objection Nixed
By High Court
WASIDNGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused today to allnw draftees
to claim conscientious objector status
because of opposition to a '!J)eeific war
such as Vietnam. The vote was 8 to
1 with justice William O. Douglas dissen-
ting.
In· the majority opinion in two test
cases, Justice Thurgood M a r s h a 11
deCJared that r.oiigress in enacting the
Selective Service Law.intended to exempt
onJY pef§ons "who op~e particiPation
in all wars -participation in war in
any form."
Of the argument that a draftee should
be able to single out a particular war
as g~nds for conscientious object.ion,
Marshall wrote :
"Persons who object solel)' to
participation in a particular war are
not within the purview or the exempting
eection even though the latter objection
may have such roots in a claimant's
~e and personality that it is
religious in character." ..
Jn his dissent, Douglas said of the
majority ruling: "Conscil!11Ce l,s
repudiated • • • the court has done
violence to the basic philosophy of the
first amendment and we take a step
backward.''
The decisions upheld lower court rul·
(Ste DRAFT, Paae I) • .,
• • ac s Ir ner
•
. -
• ~ ~~ ;.
High Court Nixes •
.
Draft Objeetion _ ,,
To •speeiiie War~
Dune Buggy
Falls With
Tangle Tooilht
' . j
Bral{es Off ~ • I
Dangling on a 350-foot canyon cliff,
a COsta Mesa man held his dune buggy
in place while his wife and daughter
clambered out Sunday, then plunged to
his death on lh.e rocks below.
Horrified friends who frantically helped
steady the litlle car watched as it plum·
miled upside-down into a dry creek bed,
crushing the victim beneath it.
Dead is Richard B. Floyd. 35, of 258
E. 21st St., who::<: body was recovered
from the remote, rugged terrain in
Cleveland National Forest several hours
later.
Orange County Sheriff's search and
rescue Learn men1bers used ropes and
pulleys to haul the mangl~~ body back
Ul the rugged trail.
Investigators cldssed the tragic ac·
cident as a non·motor vehicle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewis E. Stavenhager
said the accident occurred at 2 p.m ..
but details were unavailable ror several
hours due to lnaccesS'ibiUty of the area.
Three hours alone were spent recover·
ing Floyd 's corpse.
Recounting the tale of horror, Deputy
Marty Yingling said three families took
dune buggies .to the remote area. near
the intersection of Trabuco and El Cariso
truck trails.
One veteran r:;,,cuer branded the
weekend t~k as terrlbly foolish, due
to hazarlfous conditions a n d in·
accessibility.
Deputies said the group was enjoying
the exhilarating off.street sport -rid ing
in line -when Floyd'!! dune buggy,
in the lead, slithered up to the precipice
in a shower of sand and mud.
Scrambling to the family's aid, com-
panions helped hold the buggy in place
while Mrs. Lllllan Floyd and the couple's
small dawghter stepp.:d to safety.
Grim and terrified, Floyd kept his
feel planted firmly on the brakes.
"But the second he fuok: hiS feet off
and tried to e$CO.pe, the buggy fell ,"
said one deputy. "He didn't have a
chance."
His horrified family watched the fatal
plunge, which was placed at about 10
miles northeast of the t;l iCariso FJre
Station, off Ortega Hflhwa)r. "
One of the other dune buggies was
driven to tJie fire station which dispatch-
ed a truck to the scene and radioed
sheriff's deputies !:-nm the scene.
Floyd's companions were idf'ntlfied as
'service station owner Jim Tice, Hank
C. MadRln, both of C.Osta Mesa, and
Marine Rick A. Hughes, of Twentynine
Palms.
Funeral services were pendlna today.
UP'I T•ll•l;lttlt
FRAZIER, LEFT, SAYS HE'S COOL: THEN BOMB SCARE
Muh1mmad Ali, Ever Confident, Punches Sm•ll Big
Security, Tension High ·
For Title Fight Tonight
NEW YORK rUPI) -Jot Frazier
and Cassius Clay weighed in at the
heaviest of their lives today f<,Jr their
heav'yweight 'chhm.pinnship bout in
Madison Sqt14re. Garden· tonight,
Fraz,ier can1e in at 205 1h pounds,
and he was foll.owed t.o the scales an
hour aiut a half Later by the 215·
pound Clay.
''I'm going to straighten It atl out
ton ight," Clay shouted to the mob of.
reporters and hangers-on.
NE\V YORK (AP) -A vaiue bomb
scare, a reported threat on Joe Frazier'&
life and tighter1ed' stcurlty measures ad· * u ·"t.
.W ~nt Figbtlnfo?
Better Check
Tuesday's ·Paper · . ' . ' .
You •. may . have watched Amerioa'&
astronautf plant Old GlorY on the moon
via home television bu\ )'OU... won't get
similar treatment for lhe heralded
"Fight of the Century" from New York '
City tonight.
HOme television is blacked out !his
evening wh~n . two prize fighters known
as "Smokin' Joe" Frazier and Muham-
mad "The Mouth" All battle if out
at 7:30 p.m. our Ume for the undisputed
heavyweight championship of the world.
Radio, too1 has had lts wlres chopped
"'at rUigsi~~. ·
There is one exception wherein a
l'ound·by-roudd recap of whit's just hap-
pened will be broadcast from a powerful
little multi-watter station situated in
beautiful downtown ·Burbank.
Station KBBQ of Burbank. will start
broadcasting pre-right dopa tonight at
?:OS o'clock and then at 7:30 begin
recappinR each round as Frazier and
JS.. BLACKOUT Paae I)
ded to the theatrical ·atmosphere as
tension , mounted for t o t1 i g h t ' s
heavyweight title nght M ween Frazier'
and Muhammad Ali (See SP9rls, Page
2:1 ).
Eight detectives were said to be
guarding Frazier and his manager,
Yancey Durham, after the heavyweight
champion reportedly received a letter
and later an anonymous telephone call
threatening his life i1 he did inol throw
the •fight.
Frazier as well as his manager were
in hiding, not.available for comment.
A source close. to llraz.ier .. however,
ins.isled that the· thr;eats ·Were made.
Also allOthe'r report 1Circulatl!d ·SUnday
that the City stuire· Motor Inn at Seventh
Avenue and 52nd Street. Fiazler's normal
New York ,headquarters, had received
a bomb threat.-tt • ' • •
Ttie s.ame Frazier source · said ·that
the lhreat was checkea out but no bomb
was found. Five .hundred special police
ha ve been · assigned to Madi$0n Square
Garden .
Both Frazief and Muhammad Ali Jam..
tribUted to · the· clGak-Eind-dag'ger· at-
mosphere surrounding the projected $30
million spectacu1ar when they brolfe
camp Saturday night, came to New York
and immediately went into hiding.
Both were unavailable to newsmen.
However, the garrulous and o~goJna;
Ali walked the ManhaUan street;s Sunday.
entered coUee shops, chatled and signed
autographs for admirers and even paid
a visit to Madison Square Garden, scene
of the figbL
Threats and rumorJ for y~n have
been routine at big heavyweight flghta,
most of them regarded as the work
of . pranbters and fanatics. Few trl
taken seriously.
However, such threats have a~
a!leraled since the emergence o( All~
the former Cassius Clay, a brash and
controversial figure who has embraced
the Black ~uslim faith and refWfed to
go lnto military service.
.•
,
•
'
~ •
% DAIL t PILOI s
, • •
""
N. Viets • ID Trouble?
' • '
.L~ed Ch inese, Premier Takes Mystery Trip
~ LONDON (UPI) -North Vietnam
dildoRd .00.y Iha! O>inese C<>mmunlst
Premier ClJ>tJ ED-lal had jusi vilited
Hanoi in cmnection with ·•u .S. ag-
gression." Diplomats said the visit meant
Hanoi is in trouble and wants help.
Flrst dipJomatie assessments of tht
mes-pected 'isit said Ptking in tum
is dewmined not ta allow the Hanoi
rqime to be deftated militarily or to
be wukeotd to the point of polttial
crisis.
The diplomatic assessmeot said the
O:iou visit rtflecttd the apparent success
of the current U.S.41.acked South Y"iet-
rmnest opttation in Laos against the
llo Cbt !dinb Trail.
'!'be high lovd of the °"""" mission,
Ill COllJllOlitioo, Ille lime <I Ille villt
and not least the lad lhat Hanoi w<d
for the OUnae leaders all point to
new <kvdopment of aisls proportions.
the ~tsald.
Just what Hanoi wants and what Pek-
ing is ready to give mnains a matter
for speculation at this early stage of
the Sino-Vietnamese get-together. Peking
all along bas 11111«1 Hanoi to go oo
lighting to Yldory.
Nor was it ruled cad: that • similarly
com~ Soviet -might go to Hanoi -or, alt.emaUve.ly. that lop level
W.b might be intiated in Moscow.
Anything less than that would mark
a clear shift by Hanoi to PWng, at
the expense of_...
* * * * * * ·Reds Reported Massing
For Laos Counter Blow
SAIGON (UPI) -Mllilary ...aces
Wd loolgbt North \'lelmm is pooring
-troops into
0
1.aos to """""' the stru. against tbe Ho Cbt Minh Trail
by tbe 240,DOkwl South Ywtnamese
Wk r-, desplSe l,lllO --
lhat --oyed .. aipply -
in lhe,..,t--cloys.
A Soatb -gmenl r<pOrlal his forces bad destro}'ed IJ,139 Um
d. Cornl'Nmist mun.D:ms iD Laos. Tbe
strike -tbe Ho Cbt Minh mppty trail appeared so successful Chinese
Comm1mjq Prmller Chou F.n-lai Dtw
" -to -Ille silwotioo. Miliwy soorces said the North VJet·
mmese ttiafaroements and JUPPlies
..... moring ..... <I tbe D<rn!al "'l>Pl1
Two Teen Giru
Critical Aher
Cycle Accidents
Two 1-ed girls -sulletel -Injuries in _,ate motorcycle aa:ideuts
In Laguna Bead> Friday nigbl, ranain
in aitical condiDoD in Somb Coast Com.
IDllllily BOlpital today.
-J-. 19, of 54115 en.:. er.. ....t, Newpcrt Bead> and Y-Jdoria
Hopkin. II, of P!Jomi<. Ariz. haff btta
tn the hospital's intensive cart unit liDoe
tbe acddeotl, according to a boopltaJ
ipoksmen
Ste"Jtn Lawmx:e Qary. 25. of tbe
Newport Bead> addross, _.tor of lhe
cycle oo which Miss Jooes was a pa.m.
g.,., wu llllled In tbe fun accident which
occu:rred at 10:50 p.m. Friday m Park
A venue near Tburst.on Intermediate
School.
M"m Hopkin wu Injured about ha I I
an hour later when the motcrcycle on
which &be was a pauimge:r aasbed in
the 1500 bk>ck of Temple Hills Drivt.
Gary Edwanl Kropenick, 3198 Alta
Lagun.a Blvd, open.tor al lhe cycle
in\'ok--ed in the secmd accident. ac.aped
with minor injuries.
Police said that oooe of the four vic-
tims WM wearing a safety helmet and
a corooer's invesUgator said the dead
man "would baTe bad a good chance
of surviving'' bad he worn a helmet
The first aeddent OCCWTed "'ben CUrry
apparently lost control of his cy"<:le on
the steep Park Avenue Hill and swerved
into the hillside.
The ~ couple stopped to ,.iew
the crash scme and ~'ere warned bv
officers against riding: at high speed
without a-ash belmtts. Police claim they
sped ~ on their biU, ooly lo era.sh
moment& later on a nearby hill.
01.UMI COAST
DAllY PILOT .......... --c..M-.
............ ........ s.. C" 71
OUMGa CJ)oUT P'Ull.l.SMMO CIJIUNft
l.a-t H. w ...
~-............
Vke~\:.a~ .......
l\-11 Ke"'8 ....
n....., A. .... ., .. : ..
--.1111 MltW
O •rln H.. L-• l ic.l.1nl P. H'1R
ANlll!lal ~ ... &ctwl
°""'" c.. ..... : Ill .,,.. ..., .... .,_,..,, a-.: Jm ..__, .... .,,..,
~--:ml'-fAlluift,._ 8iw'I: 1M I-" .....,_. s-~:-.... EJ~bal
Dill\.'f' l"IU)T, .... ~ "' _...... ...
•• , ,, ............... Mlty --._ .., • ..,.,,.... .,,,,.. ... ~ t.o.
.......,. .,_,., CIM -. 1..,-;4101 ~ ....... V.....,,J.-~ ~ .. , , •• lie. ....... wt-. -
,..... ....... Mlldlllit ~ ... " af ............ c.. ......
T ln 4J MJ:-4Jt1
a 1"W.W ...... "4J.MTI
S. CZ $1 Al .... , 'W
ftll:; I I IT <ffl.44,U
~ ""' Orlllel9 °""" ........... ~'-• _ ,..._ -n~ ......, _..,. w .,,,.,....;::c:tc Wtill
""'Y ... 1# I 7 ......... ,_ ....... .,.. .... . -·--.. ·-~--<-Ill ..... c....-.. -...... .. _.,..., .... ...a/11 .. _. ..,. ~,~.,__,,_
•
...... which ...... hil again today by
fighler-bombers. Mott lhan 1.000 sorties
•ere nown again today by fighter·
bomben, bdi<opter gunships and supply
bdloopltn.
'Ille military """""' aid CommoniJt
truck traffic ewer (be past four or five
<lays bod gone boclt to a lovtl ol 1,200
ts l,lml ftbic1es per clay from Ille low
point d Si» io 600 daily reported last
'lblrsday by President N"tmn.
Lt. Gtn. Boane Xuan Lam. commander
ci the South Vietnamese task fo~ in
Laos. aid the South VirtnanvM bad
destroyed l,,3U tom ci food supplies
in the JDOOtb.old operation and that truck
trafflC IDUlh OD tbt Ho Cbi Minh frail
bad been cut to a '"minimum. ..
1bt new troop and supply movements
from North Vltlnam ._.,~ lo the north
aod indicated a majcl' counterattack by
the North Y-....._,. was in tbe making.
Lam admitted tbe !iptlng so far had\
been bani and ..... .... meeting tbe
elilo <I tbe li<lr1h VleJDamea troop> ..
f',....P .. el
BLACKOUT . ••
Ali go at it in Madilml Square Garden.
All this ...... about became KBBQ
ts a membeS' of the Mutual Network
which bas a apeda1 line in al ringside.
'Ibey didn't get it without • court fight
first before the real fight.
Admittedly, this isn"I goin( lo be lhe
perled solutioa for btJcked--Out Southern
Califomiam.
"Our signal tJ a btt dillicult lo pick
up," a KBBQ spokesman admitted to
tbe DAILY PILOT today. "We have
a six-tower pat&em but we have to
weaken our signal down your way to
protect a Mexican station."
To clarify tbe tedmkal talk. the KBBQ
spokesman suggests fight foUawers can
tune them in at 1500 OD the AM dial
-•·just to tbe left of KPOL. at 1540."
For fight fanatics wbo just can"t
fathom aU this. there. is always the
closed-drcuit te~on in tbeaten and
auditoriums somewhere. oear you. Fifteen
bucks a seat for the black·and-wlUte
picture and if you imi!t on color video,
tbe seat SCBJe is 125. Pl, ILi and Ito.
Of course, at those pric.es you run
the risk one of the principals might
faint during Round 2 or maybe e\'en
during ptt-figbt instzuctioos.
Meauwbile for home television fans,
!Ullions seem Wlifonnly vague on how
they will cover the Battle of the Cham·
pions.
Spokesmen for channels 2 and 11 sav
tbey will run a printed tape alq Ute
bottom.\ ol their ngular program pic-
tures to tell who bit who when, or
who fell down.
Folb at cba!lneb 4 and S think they
may transmit words too. An official
at Owmel 7 said it's a litlle too early
to tell what they'll do -if anything.
So there you ba\'e it, fight fans .
Burbank may ht tbe only amwer •
f"rona Pqe I
DRAFf ...
lngs against two men who rdused to
serve in Vietnam .
Guy Porter GWetle of New York City
was sentenced to' two years iq prison
for refusing lo report for induction. Louis
A. Kegre of Bakersf1eld. CaW., sought
to get out of the sen·ke afler be bad
been drafted.
Marshall s.ald that the court was not
suggesting that CongI'6S could not bave
decided to exempt those "A·bo objtct
to a parUcul&r war bClt was detmnining
lhett was a "otutral, secular justifica.
lion" for the law as •Titten.
Jn other major actions, the court:
-Dedded OD a lie. M, ,,,te to let
stand a ruling by Maryland"• blghesl
coort that tbe conirovtnial S""1ish lllm.
.. I Am Curious (Yellow)", was ob9cene .
The tie ""'Ole did not set a high c:ow-t
precedenl In tJw bul mmty alhrmed
tbe state coort JudgmeoL
-Refused to bear an appeal by •lhdst
ldJclalyn Murny O"Halr wbo claJm<d
the ....,..., .. on the Apollo I ond Apollo
II rupu t'o tbe mooa tml'fOl"rly in)e<ted
• ~ ldlvttles Into lbelr opmttons.
-llodined for the tlme hetna to lurUler
coosider a cue chalk!n&1ne the practices
of 3S statn to permit ere_aler rpendine
or we money 1n -..aJlhy JCbool dlstricts
thatl ln poor ones. 1be jmUces Rnt
a test case back to f1orida for furtbtr
pro<t<dlnp.
I>iplomats verxd in Far -., al·
fain had littlt doobt the Vietnam war
b enteri.nc a new, crucial stage with
u yet unpredictable comequences.
Chou bu not left CUna for five years
or ~ lit quietly dropped plans for
a visit to Africa last year.
Dipk>matic sources not.ed that among
those accompanying him are not only toe par1y cbiefs but also the d • p u t y
cbiel of stall ol tbe OW-army.
Tbe Hunga.rtan news agency !.m
quoted "'Pei.in& ob:lenen" as sa)ing
OIOU's journey and hls talks in Hanoi
•·came after the Chinese gO\·ernment
declared it v.ill lake every measure
ID proride supporl to the peoples of
Itwkd,fna alld will not allow the
Americans to do wi1.b tboR peoples as
they please." im said the official Peking oewspaper
Peoples Daily published a cominentarY
today warning that "Lbe American acts
of --bear • thrW .. Oiina, ""hich will not remain indifferent.•· It re·
ported a •·sympathy demonstration of
millions" in fa\'or of Chinese govern-
ment policy ,
Peking bas issued a series o( sharply
""orded official Otinese government
statements condemning U.S. activitiel
in lndochina and stating it would not
stand idly by but has made no specific
threat to send troops to Hanoi's aid.
Hanoi radio today broadcast a state-
ment ~ t~ patriotic btmt or Laos
warning the United States that if U.S.
infantrymen enter Laos "'the entire re--
s~ibilUy for the dangerous coo.sequen-
ces arising from this ~venturistic act
will rest with the Niion administration."
i\feanwhile. in Paris chief Hanoi nerouator Xuan Thuy tiold a gro.rp of
American pacifists that be bad ....... <d
the long suspended secret peace negotia-
tions with President N1U1D's chief peace
negotiator. a spokesman fer the pacifist
lf1lUP said today.
Stan Dale cl Ollcago, a newsman
for radio station WDAI in the Chicago
area.. said Xuan Thay made the
di!IC'losurt during a rnttlillg with some
of the 170 American pacifists cutmltly
in Paris for meeting with the delegates
ta the Paris peace talks.
''Xuan Thuy told us he had met
privately with Amba~dor (Oavkl K.
E.) Bruce several times," Dale told
newsmen at a news coofe:rence called
by the -pacifist g rou ps from the
American Friends Service Committee.
clergy and laymen ooocerned, and the
fellowship of recooeiliatioo.
The nm.ark wa.s the fl:rst ioclicaUon
that secret negotiations betwttn the
United States and North Vietnam bad
been resumed.
Freeway Voting:
Reasoned View
Versus Radicals
Newport Beach ~tayor Ed Hirth said
today the difJerencts in Tuesday's
Pacific c.oast Freeway election "are not
in our city's goals -mtttly in method!
to accomplish them.''
!tfayor Hirth and foar other member.I
of the city council have called for a
"no'' ,-ote in the balloting. urging instead
tbe powers of government be le!t in
the hands of the council.
free'lti·ay Fighters spokesmen have
pa.igned for a '")~·· \'Ott, maitltai·
ning "it is time for radical measure"
t.o •·sa,·e our city from the ft!eway."
ln his :statement this morning, the
mayor outlined his ptnOOal thinking on
the issues:
"Sone of w want to see a monstrow
freeway cutting through our <'Ommunity.
We all realiie our growing traffic pro-
blems must be solved.
"If yoo feel that just telling the state
wt have decided t.o cancel our freeway
agreement will solve our problem. then
\'Ole 'yes' on the initiative measutt.
li you belie\"t a more Consuucti\·e ap-
proach v1ould be lo devise acceptable
solutions through comprehemive study
to propose as altemattve.s, \'Ote 'no'
OD I.be first item.
Deck1w11.d Seized
After Speargun
Robbery , Kid11ap
A teenager who said be was Alaska·
bouod, but got only as far as a lliewport
Beach sport[ishing' dock was arrested
today in the kidnap-robbery o( a 1'&ilt.r
abducted at speargun-point.
Investigators said the 11-year.()Jd
suspect made the mi.sla.kt ol miealing
to bis \'ictim where be worked as a
deckhand.
~larlill L. Dart. of 203011 Harber
Boulevard, C.OSta ~tesa. caUed police
alter he wa re.leased unharmed at
De.laney's Sea Shanty ttStaurant, near
Davey's I..octer .
Investigators c:onlacted the sportlishlng
and aCW'tiOl'l boat firm. quesUoning
them about tbe poWhle suspect.
'Ibe Loo& Beach youth was taken into
cwtody and admitted to Oran.t:e Counly
Juvenile Hall. pending detenninalloo of
charges to he bn>uiht ata!ost him. °".!! told polk< he plcb<I up tbe
boy •tme hitctHikl:ng at 3:30 a.m. and
was invited into his motel room al
lfiT Newport Bl\·d., Costa P.,ltsa.
Dart s.a.ld tbe room was run of tuaqe
and the Mpecl discussed In""& foe
Alub today. an tbe wllll< nimmaailll
through wittUl!So
DollLY PILOT s..tl ,..._
Two Ways to Fl9
On_ wa.lers of ~ewport Harbor. all boats seem to be going lhat·a·"'ay
,,·hile m ~be arr abov~. the Newport Beach police helicopter travels
counten'lSe. Alaybe it all depends on \\"hich \\'ay the \vinds are
a-hlo~·in'.
Kidnnpers of 4 Airmen
Said 'Pro Guerrillas'
A~1C.ARA /UPI) -A Turkish go,·em-
ment spokesman said today the gunmen
'A'bo lddnaped rour U.S. airmen 'A· ere
••profeuk>nal urban guerrillas" subsidiz-
ed from abroad.
''This b the ViOrk not of ordinary
uni\"er&ity students, but of a small group
~ profe:ssioal urban guerrillas.·· the
lj:(lkesman said. ..'Ibey are subsidized
from outside Turkey and use the tactics
of South American guerrillas. Some of
the ringleaders have been trained by
outside groups ... f
The airmen -s. Sgt. J immie J.
~ere in action in Ankara alone.
Police still believe kidnaped airmen
may be oo the sprawling campus of
lo.fiddle East Technical University,
Tv.·o thousand of the university's 5,000
studmts have been questiooed and '11
ha,·e bee11 charged with offenses in-
\'Ol,,ing the me ol firearms in battle.s
with police and tnlops Friday. T\i"o
persons died in the fighting.
Turkish authorities consider t be
univenity a .,breeding grolflld o f
radicalism.
Reward set
At $100,000
For Blast
WASHINGTON lAP) -Congressional
leaden announced today a $100,000
rtward for information leading to the
arrest and conviction of the perwon or
persons responsible for the bombing or
the Senate wing of the Capitol one week
ago.
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
said the reward monty was posted by
private donors whom he would not iden-
tify.
Scott and Senate Democratic Leader
~like f.1ansfield said the dohon volun-
teered to put up the money which hat
been placed in escrow in a bank.
f.1ansfield said the bank could not be
ldmtilied, either.
The re"·ard was announced after House
and Senate leaders met to discuss securi·
ty of the Capitol.
Mansfield said they agreed that the
Capitol police for~ should be ma.de
fully professional, with no more
patronage appoiobnents.
Scott said he was not at liberty to
say •·helber investigators have any bard
leads in their bunt for whoever placed
a bomb in a men's room on the first
floor of the Capitdt
The bomb exploded in the early m<n-
lng hours of March 1, causing damage
estimated at $300,000. No one was in·
ju red.
Afansfield and Scott issued a statement
saying "any person or persons providing
information will be fully protected.
Sources of information will be regarded
as completely confidential."
They said anyone having infonnation
on the bombing should make it available
to any law enforcement agency or o(.
ficial. including local offices or the FBL
Their formal stattment said congres-.
sional leaders "have been advised that
the money has been made available
by private sources."
Scott, ~1ansfield, House Speaker Carl
Albe-rt (D-Okla.). Rep. Hale Boggs (I).
La.). and Gerald R. Ford (R-Mich.),
the House majority and minority leaden;
and Sen. Allen Ellender (0-La.), the
Senate president pro-tem, all signed the
re'A'atd announcement.
Scott said at the conference on Capitol
security. rongressional leaders also
agreed to ha\·e police and their sergeants
at arms make new reeommendation1
on security procedures, including the
hours the building will beopen to the
public .
Sextoo of San Angelo, Tex .• and airmen
J.C. Latty J . Heavntt of Denver, Colo.,
James ~1. Gholson of Alexandria, \'a ,
and Riclwd Caras:ti of Stamford. Coon.
-were abducted at gunpoint 'Ibursday
and held for $400,000 ransom.
One Last Trip
1be kidnapers threatened lo shoot the
captive tmless the mooey was delivered
by I a.m. last Friday. The ransom
was nol paid and no word has been
heard lrom the tidnapers since the
deadline.
Girl Doesn't Know Slie's Doomed
Troops with mine detecton returned
to Ankara's ltliddle East TechnicaJ
Univer&ity today to resume their search
of the grounds and six miles of un-
derground tunoe1s lhat booeyaimb the
area carrying the campus be<lting
•)'Jlem.
Automatic weapons, revolvers. rifles.
large amount.1 of ammunition. gasoline
bombs. wireless equipmeJ1t and uniforms
had already bttn found in the city,
tbe spokesman said.
"'Ibis i.s the biggest manhunt in
Turkey's history and ooe of the greatest
problems the government has ever fac-
ed." he said, ·10e hunt will go on
until the men art found."'
. H~ ~id government officials were op-
llmtst1c the men 'A' ere still alive.
'.'Although the kidnapers are militants.
if they are Tlub it is against the:
grain to kill deftmeless people."
He said the police v.-ttt following
several leads and 20.000 secwity men
BAY CITY. 1'tich. <tJPI) -A group
of school bus dri\·ers in this central
~tichigan community ha\'e narted a
'"Disoeyland fW}d" for a t-year-old girl
with only monuis tn live.
'Ibt girl. suffering lrom cystic fibros is.
doesn 'l know a thing about it and her
parents have asked the newt media
not to release her name so she woo"t
find oot.
··we want her life to be as normal
as possible.'' ber mother, a school bus
driver herself. said.
The idea originated among the drivers
about three weeks ago. They managed
to keep it a ~1 from the mother
fer about a week. She became suspicious
and began asbng questKJl'L1; wMtl they
called a union meettng without notifymg
her.
"I'm a committenroman kr the mm
and I'm supposed to be ooe of ~
first to know ab::lcrt any meetmgs., .. a
said. t
Her first ructioD Up<XI tarmq I>«
fellow driven fttt tryUJc IO dn&m up
CASH
LOANS·
. ~
"OLDEST AND EASIEST
WAY TO BORROW"
enough money to send her daughter
to Disneyland was one of surprise.
"It just amazes me how people will
put themselves out liU that,'' she said,
"You just doo"t apect it."
\\"hen a!ked how her daughter ·would
react if enough money is colltcted for
the trip. .n.. sai<t "I know sbe"ll be
real excited. Sbt"s always talking about
going scrntplact, .,
The tiTer malfunction was ftnt
dt-tec".ed by docton three year1 ago,
•l°.b:xrgb ~-mptoms such as a distended
~ first began appearing before
the pri .as a year old. Little of ber
~!I' remains.
Her mother says, however, that she
ln'ts a "perfectly normal" We. The
te'd-grader alt.ends school almost daily.
<::a!l'l •art to start riding her brand
r..ew bite once warm weather rehum,
and bas as many friends as most children
her a.gt.
""'He only noticeable problem Is that
she gets overtired sometlmes," her
mother said.
Bonow from $5 lo $I 00, and
mo<e, JNSTANTL Y. No red
!ape, no credit checks. All you
nee d is an item for coDateral.
NO EXLANA TION NECESSARY.
AU: LOANS CONFIDENTIAL
e Fast e Frielllly e CollYenient
• Come in and see what we
offer our customen. A MW
and unusual experien,ce In
in shop p in 9 enjoyment •
Where people In tlle know
save money every time tlley
b11Y. / -__,
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SEL!CT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
£0STA MESA JEWELR'Mnd LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SELL, nADE
1838. NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-n41
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -llolwMn Harbcw & Broocl,.oy
,. 4
7
\
I
i-
i
Bun1ingi~~r-B.ea¢~-
, . EDITION ·~ N.Y. Steeka
' VOL. 64, NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES .. ' O~ANGE cooN:TY: CALIFORNiA ' ~· TEN CENTS
Court Spui·ns · Braftees' · Viet War ·· Ojections·
, . r .
WASHINGTON (UPi) -The Supreme
Court refused today· to allow draftees
to claim conscientious objector status
because of op~ition to a specific war
such as Vietnam. The vote was 8 to
1 wilh justice William 0 . Douglas disse.n-
ting.
Jn lhe majority opinion in two test
cases, Justice Thurgood. M a r s h i1 '1 I
declared that Congress in enacting the
Selective Service Law intended to exempt
Youth, 16,
Held by FBI
In Hijack
MIAMI (AP) -A l~Y·"'-Old high
school sophomore tOday be d a Na·
tional Airlines jet at r ~. Ala.,
presented the stewardess a ii instead
of a ticket, and forced 1, .: crew '"
fly him to Miami, where he surrendered
peacefully.
Thomas Kelly Marston was charged
wilh aircraft piracy and ~eld by federal
marshals at Miami for return to Mobile.
A· National spokesman said the youth
surrendered to FBI agents ';without any
trouble" when lhe 727 landed at Miami
shortly before noon, EST. ·
The night ended almost three hours
after FBI agents said the youth boarded
the plane at Mobile , ordered 33
passengers and four stewardesses off
and ~emanded to be flown to Canada,
He changed his mind over Tennessee
and B.llowed the crew lo fly him to
1'1iar:ni. Tbe only persons aboard with
him were Capt. Robert Carter. co-pilot
~J~.,Graham and Flight Ery;lneer Jerry
Gemma.
Carter told newsme n al Miami the
youth said he wanted to go to Canada
because he was getting bad grades and '-
his parents were on his back.
Carter said the boy was very frighten-
ed. "He said he just wanted to get
out of Mobile. We told him if he would
let Us return him there. it would . go
easier on him . He told us Mobile was
the l~st place he wanted to go."
Carter said he soon became confident
he C<:Juld talk the boy into changing
his mind.
"We kept talking,•· he said, "and when
we were over Knoxville I told him tfutt
anytime be decided to change his mind,
just let us know. I turned around and
looked at him and he handed me his
gun."
At Mobile, Marston's father. Merrill
H. r.1arston. said his son had gotten
up and lelt home for school at 6 a.m.
"Much earlier than usual." He said his
5on was an average student but declined
to discuss the morning's events.
The boy was wearing his school clothes.
a beige jacket and blue shirt when
he boarded lhe plane. authorities said.
They also said the 5-foot-9. ISO-pound
youth was armed w i t b a .33-caliber,
chrome-plated pistol.
Although Capt. Carter said Marston
told him he didn't have any problems
with a broken romance, airport police
said the youth was accompanied to the
Mobile airport by an attractive girl.
They said the couple started toward
the boarding ramp, stopped and appeared
to argue. Then the girl turned and ran
~hrough the gate while the youlh boarded
th~ plane, they said.
' only persons 11wh0 oppose partic!Patlon
in all wars -partjcipation in war in
any form.''
Of the arpment lhat a dr'1tee shou}d
be able to siz)lle o~'. • par:llcul~r "."'ar
as grounds for conac1entloua ObJect1on,
MarSball wrote: · · · '
"Persons who object solely to
participaU9fl in a ,Particular war are
not ·witl\iiV'\he pUrview 'oI tlie exMlptihg
sectton evep• though the latter · objection
may have such roots ir. a claimant's . ' . .
' " I . ' I ... > ' '
: ' ~ ,.
~ ' l
con.science and ptraon1llty thit lt is
reli'gious in character,"
In his dissent, Douglas sai4 or the
majority ruling: • "COOscience is
repudiated . , • the court has done
violence to the basic philosophy of the
first amendment and we take a step
backward."
The decisions upheld lower C<:JUrt rul·
ings against two men who refused to
&erve in Vietnam.
'
FRAZIER, LEFT, SAYS HE'S COOL: THEN BOMB SCARE
~ Muhamm~d Ali , Ever Confident, Punches Sm'all Bag
Security, Tension High
1 ' ~i~ • I• A
For Title Fight Tonight
NEW YORK fUPIJ -Joe Frazier
nnd Cassius Clay weigMd in at the
heaviest of their Lives todGy for their.
heavyweight championship bout m
/lfadison Sqtta"re Garden tonight.
Frazier came in at 205~ pound-s,
nnd he was followed to the scales an
hour and a half later by the 215·
pourtd Cloy.
''I'm going to straighten it all. out
tonight," Clay shouted to the mob of
reporters and hangtrs-on.
NEW YORK (AP) - A vague bomb
scare, a reported threat on Joe Frarier's
life and tightened security measures ad·
dee! to the theatrical atmosphere as
tension mounted for I o n i g h t ' s
heavyweight title fight between Frazier
and Muhammad All (See sports, Page
23 ).
Eight detectives \'lere said lo be
guarding Frazier and his manager,
Yancey Durham, after the heavyweight
champion repoM.ed1y received a letter
and later an anonymbus telephone call
threatening his life if he did not throw
the fight.
Frazier as well as bis manager were
in hiding, not available for comment.
A source close to Frazier, however,
insisted that the threats were made.
Also another report circulated Sunday
that the City Squire Motor Inn at Seventh
Avenue and 52nd Street, Frazier's normal
New York headquarters, had received
a bomb threat.
The same Fraz.ier source said that
the threat was checked out but no bomb
was found. Five hundred special police
have been assigned to Madison Square
Garden.
Both Frazier and Muhammad Ali C-On·
tributed to the cloak-and-dagger at-
mosphere surrounding the projected $30
million spectacular when they broke
camp Saturday night. came to New York
and immediately went into hiding.
Both were unavailable to newsmen.
However. the garrulous and outgoing
Ali walked the Manhattan streets Sunday.
entered coffee shops, chatted and signed
autographs for admirers and even paid
a visit to Madi3on Square Garden. scene
of the fight.
Threats. and rumors for years have
been routine at big heavyweight fights,
most of them regarded as the work
of pranksters and fanatics. Few are
taken seriously, * 1:r * 1:r 1:r 1:r
Be111e1nher Radio?
1 St.ation Pries Into Blackout
You may have watched America '.s the DAILY PILOT today. "We have
Guy Porter Gillette or New Yoik City
was sentenced to two ytars ' i~ prison
for refusing to report for induction. Louis
A. Negre of Bakersfield, Calif., sought
to get out of· the service after he bad
been drafted.
Mai-sliall said I.hit the court was not
suggesting that Congress could not have
decided to exempt those who object
to a particular war but ·was determining
there was a "neutr-al, secular justifica•
tlon ".for the law as writte.n. r'
In otlu!r major actions, the court:·
-Decided on a tie, 4-4, vote to let
stand A ruling by Maf}'land's highest
court that the controversial Swedisl;l film,
''I ,Am Curious (Yellow )", was obscene.
The . tie.. vote did not set a high COW't.
precedent tn law but merely affirmed
the state 1..'0urt judgment.
-Refused to hear an appeal by atheist
Madalyn Murray O'Hair who claimed
the astronauts on the Apollo 8 and Apollo
11 flights to the moon improperly injected
rellgious activities into their operations.
-Declined for the time being to fw1.ber
consider a case challenging the practices
of 35 'states to pennit greater spending
cif tax money in wealthy school districts
than in poor ones. The justices sent
a ·test case back to Florida for fUrther
proceedings .
69 Cent. Decision
Beach School Tax Rate Voting Set
By RUDI NIEDZIEl.'l!U
Of llM D•HY 1'1191 Sl•lf
Voters in the Huntington Beach Union
High School Plstrict will be asked to
go to the polls again Tuesday. this
time to decide the fate of a 6kent
tax hike
Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to
II p.m. at Fountain Valley, Huntington
Beach, Ocean View, Seal Beach and
Westminster elementary schools. Polls
will also be open at Seal Beach-Leisure
World clubhouses.
Schoolmen have characterized the elec-
tion as crucial to the survival of the
&ix-campus district.
lf it is approved, the current $1.39
tax rate would be raised to $2.08 per
$100 of assessed valuation while the
current educational program is main-
tained.
NASA Extends .
irnis..,._ ..
'
Space Pacts
The federal government has extended
contracts for stbdy or a 12-man orbital
space station, guaranteeing jobs for some
aerospace workers in Seal Beach and
Huntington Beach for another 10 months.
Rep. Craig + Hosmer (R-U:ing Beach)
announced today that the National
Aeronautics 'and •Space Administration
fN ASAl had authorized another $6.8
million for study of the space station,
with McDonnell Douglas Astronautics
Co.. Huntington Beach, and North
American Rockwell. Seal Beach, each
receiving $.1.4 million. These companies
are making parallel competitive design1
of the space station .. About 100 men
are working on the project in Huntington
Beach, a McDonnell Douglas spokesman
said.
The study started in 1969 when NASA
granted $2.9 million to each company
for designs on the station.
That contract called · for design of
a large manned space station that would
be launched intact. The new contract,
which would be good for ten months.
calls for designs for a platform to be
launched in modules with the modules
_ to be assembled in orbit.
W onien Voters
Hear Plans
For Huntington.
Failure to win over the voters to
the issue wou1d mean a reduction of
taxes to the st.ate-mandated minimum
of 85-cents per $100 of assessed valuation.
District officials have predicted ... the
85-<:cnt rate would result in a "starvation
budget" for the district.
They claim that accredlt.aUon ot the
district would be serioµsly jeopardized
and that students could find it difficult
to enter institutions of higher learning.
Trustees have already·11tudied several
cost-aitting measure s in case th~
measure fails. These include reduction
of school days to one-half day, a decrease
in counseling service and intructional
rr1aterials. an Increase in class size and
elimin~tton of .1peci.al programs, bua
transportation, and interschool athletics.
The current election Is the district's
third try at a tax override in the past
two· years. A 69-cent lax measure (ailed
Nov, 3, 1970. and a 50-cent measure
!ailed in February o( 1970.
· The only organized opposition to
surface has been the Council On Sensihle
Taxation (COST), headed by Miss Claire
Kelley, an interior decorator from Hun-
tington Beach.
Although COST bas not revealed the
exact extent of its membership, the
group has argued that increases in the
assessed valuation of the district should
keep the tax rate steady without reducing
budgets.
In additJon, COST members said they
would favor cuts in administrative costs
and salaries rather than a reduction
of the educational program.
:!(id,~f~~~'! 4 ~A~rmen
·said 'Pro Guerrillas'
ANKARA (UPI) -A Turki!h govern-
ment · spokesman said today the gunmen
who kidnaped four U.S. airmen were
"professional urban guerrillas" subsidiz.
ed. from abroad.
"This Is the work not of ordinary
university students. but of a small group
of professioal urban guerrillas," the
spokesman said. "They are subsidiz.ed
lrom outside Turkey and use the tactics
of South American guerrillas. Some of
the ringleaders have been trained by
outside groups.''
The airmen -S. Sgt. Jimliiie J.
Sexton of San Angelo, Tex .. and airmen
LC. Larry J. Heavner of Denver. Colo.,
James M. Gholson of Alexandria, Va.,
and Richard Carilszl of Stamford. Conn.
-were abducted at gunpoint Thursday
and held for $400.000 ransom.
The kidnapers threatened to shoot the
captive unless the money was delivered
by 6 a.m. last Friday. The ra nsom
was not paid and no word has been.
heard from the kidnapers since the
deadline.
Troops with mine detectors returned
tG Ankara's Middle East Technical
University today to resume their search
of the grounds and six miles of un·
derground tunnels that honeye-0mb the
area carrying the campus heatina:
system.
Automatic weapons, revolvers. rifles,
large amounts of ammunition, gasoline
bombs, wireless equipment and uniforms
had already been found in the· city,
the spokesman said.
have been char~ed with offenan In-
volving the use of firearms in battles
with police and troops Friday. Two
persons died in the fighting.
Turkish authorities consider th e
university a breeding ground o f
radicalism.
Huntington Hero
Loses Mother
To Heart Attack
Less than two weeks ago , 11-year-old
David May was cited for heroism by
the Huntington Beach Fire Department.
He had saved his mother from death
by a heart attack.
Sunday, the Perry Elementary School
fifth grader returned home from a
weekend campout to find the house em~
ty. Mrs. Margie Louise May had died
of a heart attack.
Police said the 49-year-old woman had
passed out while talking to a relative
in Bellflower . Breaking down the door
at 726 Owen Ave., they found that 6he
had died around 9:30 a.m. Saturday.
Last December. Mrs. May also ex-
hibited the symptoms of a heart attack,
but her alert son managed to phone
the lire department and summon the
rescue squad in time.
astronaUts plant Old Glory on the moon a six-tower pattern but we have to
via home televisio n but you won't get weaken our. signal down your way to "What's · Cooking for Hunt Ing ton
"He had been making soup and hot
broth for me and he knew I was getting
·worse," Mrs. May said then. "He handled
everything like a ~ig man.'' SAW oman Killed
I~ Hun.tington
Auto Collision
&imilar • treatment for the heralded protect a Mexican station." Beach·• is the title of the next program
--tight of. the Century" from New York_. To clarily.,Uie technJ~al talk, the KBBQ . the League of Women Voters is olferiog
City tdnljl1l · ~ spokesman suggests fight tollowers ~an Huntington Beach ""feSlde'rlts. ~
"This is the biggest manhunt In
Turkey's history · and one of the greatest
problems the. government has ever fac·
ed." he said. "The hunt will go on
until the men are found."
ije s,gid .governtnent officials W.Gf.e op-
timistic the men were still alive.
"Although the kidnapers are. militants.
if they are Turks it is against the
grain to kill defenseless people."
Orufe
A 33-year-old woman was fatally in·
jured over the weekend when a car
driven by her son C<:Jllided with a picku~
truck at a Huntington Beach intersection.
Officers said Mrs. Maryanne J. Heagle,
of Santa Ana. was pronounced dead
on arrival at Huntington lntercommunity
Hospital shorlly after the 12:30 p.m.
accident Saturday.
Hr.r ~on. r.rorge E. Heagle. 17. was
driving north on Main Street when the
pickup. driven by Arthur E. Reynolds.
~I . of 17621 Gothard St .. collided with
tlie Hi!agle car, according to police.
Mrs. Heagle received ma~ive injuries
when she was crushed against the In-
strument panel, Investigators said.
Reynolds, uninjured. "'as cited for
failure tn y-ield right o( was IL. a poetM' I
intersection .
He!gle and his other passengu. 17
yeir-otd Rtmald Bays of Wutmln.!ttr,
suff~red only mfnor inju lres In the col-
lision.
Home television ls blacked out this tune them in at 1500 on the AM dial The presentation. which will be given
evening when twO prize fighters known -"just to the l~ft of KPOL at 1540.'' at 7:45 p.m. Thursday in the Community
as "Smokin' Joe" Frazier and Muham-.For fight fanatics who just can't Methodist Church , 6662 Heil Ave., will
mad 'iThe Mouth" Ali batlle It out fathom all this, there is alway5 the be on .. the plan to create a specialty
at 7:30 p.m. our time for the unWsput~d closed-cirCl.Jit tcleyls.ion in theaters and shopping d1strict downtown.
heavyweight championship of the ·world. auditoriums somewhere near you. Fifteen The city's beaches and ·harbors direc-
Radio, too. has had its wires chopped bucks a seat for the black-and-white tor, Vince Moorhouse, aM flanning
at ringsil'\'. . picture and if you insist on color video, Director Ken Reynolds will describe the
There is one exception wherein a the seat scale is $25. $20, $15 and flO. proposal anc. show slides and ii·
ro\Jlld·by·round recap of what's iutit hap-Of cour!!e, at thoSe prices you run lustrations.
pened will be broadcast from a powerful the risk one of the principals might City planners ha've suggested Ulat a
litUe multi-watter station situated in faint: during Round 2 or maybe even two-block aTea from Walnut to Olive
berutiful downtown Burbank. during pre-fight Instructions. avenues from Fiflh to Third streets
Station KBBQ of Burbank will start Meanwhile for home television fans , could be converted' Into a mall. They
hro:i:dcasling pre-fight dope tonight at stations seem uniformly va'gue 011 how have been urging businessmen and pr0-
7:05 o'clock and then at 7:30 begin the:y will cover the Battle of the Cham-perty ow.ners. to remodel the buildings
recapping each· round · as Frazier and plans. Into one 'cOmmon theme, such as a
All go at it In Madisbn Square 'Garden. Spokesmen. for channels 2 and 11 say "Roaring. Tw~ntles Vollage."
All tbis comes about because KBBQ they will run a printed tape alons the The Thursday night' meeting Is part. I~ a member of the Mutual Netwo'rk bottcmJJ of their regular program pie-'of a yeir·long study by the LWV oo
which has • -1•1 line in at ringside. tures to tell 'fbO hit who ~·· or "~~~E!f!!glol) Be.11\'h.
TheJ. dkfn 't .get It wi1hout a court fight who Jell down. fl . · ·~ -, ~'.;!,~ ·aJso~1nnounC!tl·
l!nl11>efor< the r<al fight. , • 11 chan~eis I and $ k t!i<y '11)'1 ' . \<ifJtM Lwy' will' "'"l:
Admittedly,. t.!m isr)'\. goine tto be lpet• m~y trans.mil .words too. official ~--' 4.t ;U.f,fOPtc ~~!lfttf.O,f i.rfecl 50lut1on tor b1'cke(l-ou :soul.hem , at Qi~ 7 said 1it'a~a. Ultle ear "'~n· Empfoymenf ft om
Californians. * • 'to1ell what they'U do -11 an , ing: • 1 J • ,.. fo· ·25. Information: ori the
"Our &ignal Is a bit difficult lo pick So lhere you have it. f!ght fBns . \ meeting )>lac:H may 1 'oe obtalhed by
up," a KBBQ spokesman admitted to Burbank may be the only ans•r. calling m-ioae. ,.
I
He said the police were following
several 'lead$ and 20M¥) security men ~
were in action· .in Ankari atone. .
Police still believe kidnaped airmen
may . be o.n the sprawling . camp~ of
Middle East Technical Univei'sity. ·
Two thousand of thf: univeiSlty's 6,000
·students have been questioned artd 27
Winds of Hurricane ·
Smash Two to Death
ULCtNJ. Yugosl.11.via (AP) -Hur·
-rtcane Wilfd! ~IC\ed up t!'fl'I • wotkme~
Sunday, carrl'il tMin• !9. teer• ud·Ulen
smi.ihed"fhem \dOwn, killinJ oiitron lb~ ·spoL. . ' , ~·
• Marinko' Ne~c. ·411, • 1111"" of
five. had hb ·head .smashed ·against a
utility pole'\. A!im , Fetahovic, ff. wis
ho>]>it.lized with ierious Injuries.
Weather
' . The fog will roll in along the
coast tonight. giving wtty to sunny
skies on Tuesday, with tempera·
tures ranging from 62 locally to
70 further inland.
INSWE TODA l'
A fertilizer plant !sn 't th«
proper place ta turn up your
nose when offered a guided
tour, at ~a•t in Huntington
Beach. See story, Page 14.
•••tl1!9 " 1C•lli.t1111 t ,Clltc:~ll!9 VI ' 1Cl•UlllM 1).:12
·Cl1"11P It
-" "''""'' ........ Of•°'" Ct¥nt'r It ,,..,.. "'"" . ... ,... u.u
(FIU~ .. ~·II Dtttfl Hllkft II ll!llltl'lal ..... • '
• S~ Ml ... b ·•n : ·,..~~ Hlloll 19
, •n111111..._. It •flln•llCI ,..-.,-
•Mlll"lkffl 1• -.1111~ ,.
,.,.. "'"' 1t w~·:··-:r 4
"'"""""''' -..S lS.lP
WtrM "'"' W
• • MOf1dily, Man.II S, l 'i. l
Mesa Driver Saves -Fam.ily1 Plunge·s to Death
Danglln& on a 350-foot canyon cliff,
a Costa J.1esa man held bis dune buggy
ill pllOO wblle hJJ wue and dlul)lttt
clJmbered out Sunday, then pluoged IO
his death on the rocks below.
Horrified friend.$ who frantically helped
study lhe little car watched as il plum.
m.i\ed upside-down into a dry creek bed,
crushing the victim beneath It.
De1d la Richard B. Floyd, 35, of 2S8
E. Jiil St., who&e body was recovered tram the remote, rugged terT1ln in
ClevtllDd NaUOllll Forest oeveral hoW'I
t.i.r.
Orqe Counly Shtrllra IW'dl and
mcue loam members 11.ed ...,.. and
pulleys IO baul the mangled body back
IO the rugged trail.
Investigators classed the tragic ac·
cident as a non-motor vehicle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewis E. Stavenhager
said the accldt.nt occurred at : p.m ..
but detallt were unavailable for several
houn ,due IO illaccwlbllily of the .....
Three hours alone were spent recover·
1111 P'loyd'o ...,..,
Recounting the tale of horror. Deputy
Marty Yinl!llng said thue famllies look
dune buggies to the remote area, near
the Intersection of Trabuco and El Carlso
truck trails.
One veteran ftlC\,ler branded t.bt
weekend trek u terribly foollJh, due
IO huwlous cooditiool I D d ilr
occealbllity.
Depulla oald the group was enjoying
the eilillir1tlng oU~ireet sport -riding
in line -when Floyd's dune buggy,
in the lead, slithered UP .io_ the pre<:lplce
1n a shower of 1and and mud.
Scrambling to the family's aid, com·
paniona helped hold the buggy in placo
while Mrs. UWan Floyd and thi couple'•
small daUihter ilepped IO ulety,
Grim aad l<rrlfled, ·Floyd kept hJJ r .. t pt.nl<d 11rm1y ... the 1wa1r.t1;
"But the second he toot 'his feet off
and trled to taeape. the buggy' fell,"
said one deputy. "He dldn'{ -have a
chance."
His horrified family watched the fatal
plurige, which was placed 1t about 10
miles northeast of tbe El Carilo Fire
StAtion, off Ortega Highway.
One of the other dune buggies was
driven IO the fin! Jtallon which dllp•lch·
ed a truck to the scene and raalotd
sheriff's deputies from the scene.
F'Joyd's companiona were identified iis
service station owner Jim Tice, Hank
C. Madgin, both of Costa ?ilesa, and
Marine Rick A. Hughes, of Twentynine
Palms.
Funeral services were pending today.
Heavy Vote Turnout Seel) 18 Cars Bit
Teenage Sniper
Shoots 4, Self
Freeway Issue to Draw Nearly 40% in Newport
By L. PETER KRIEG
Of llte D•llr ,lltl $1111
Newport Beach City Clerk Laura
Lagios today forecaat "an extremely
heavy turnout" ln Tuesday's Pacific
Coast Freeway tlection.
Citing the unusually large number of
absentee ballots. already numbering
more than 200, r.1rs. Lagios said the
turnout could be "all high as 40 percent,"
or nearly 9,500 of Newpoct's 2.J ,670 eli&i·
ble voters.
The city's 25 polling places vdll open
at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m.
Mrs. Lagios asked voters to t a k e
special note of the closing time. pointing
out that it is one hour earlier than
county-administrated elections.
Two propositions are oo the ballol.
The fir1t is an initiative that If adopted,
wou1d "ask" the City Council to rescind
a portion of an agreement with the
Slate Division of Highways dealing with
city street closings along the route of
the planned freeway east of Upper
Newport Bay through Corona de! Mar.
The second Is a Charter amendment
that. pending ratification by the state
legislature, would, if adopted, require
city councils to ct:tnduct referendums
at any point io the future that they
want to adopt similar agreements on
the coastal, or any other, freeway.
1be election was forced by the Citizens
Coordinating Committee of the Freeway
Fighters, which late last year met
Charter referendum requirements by fil-
ing petitions that were signed by more
than 15 percent of the registered voters.
CCC officials claimed that nearly 10,000
persons signed the petillonll although
Mrs. Lagios verified only the minimum
number of names. ·
The two-month election campaign has
heated in recent days, to the point where
a former city official who tried to legally
stop the election has said he may sue
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers for maklng
allegedly slanderous remarks.
Former vice mayor Hans J. Lorenz,
who with two [ormer mayors had unsuc--
cessfully appealed to both Superior Court
and California Supreme Court to stop
the vote, said Thursday Rogers' attack
on him for that action "may justify"
a slander suit.
Roger!! had referred to Lorenz and
former 1nayors Charles E. Hart and
James B. Stoddard as ··snakes emerging
rrom an agricullural preserve" in a
talk at an election rally last Monday
night.
In the campaign for a "no" vote,
the Freeway Fighters have maintained
that a massive negative count would
stop the slate's plans to build the coastal
freeviay through the city, or al least
along the adopted route parallel to the
Pacific Coast Highw.ay In West Newport
and south of Fashion Island and along
Fifth Avenue through Corona del Mar.
The anti-freeway campaign has not
differentiated between the two segment!!
of the route, although the initiative to
rescind the agreement only deals with
the Corona del Mar segment.
Support for a "no" vote on both issues
has come formally from a five-member
majority of the City Council , which sign-
ed the "yes" ballot arguments, and a
citizens committee headed by former
mayors ?i1rs. Doreen Marshall and Stod·
dard.
*** ***
DAIL.V •llOT Sllff l"htlot 'BOY OF THE YEAR'
Boyt Club's Fierro
Fierro Named
'Boy of Year'
In. Huntington
GREENWATER, Wash. (UPI) -A
JS.year-old boy who had "never been
In any trouble'' wall found lying face
down in the mow. killed by one of
two rifles he had used Sunday to riddle
passing autom"obiles.
''I can1t see any reason for it,'' said
William H. Egnew Sr., the father of
the sniper and an irupector for the
Seattle Fire Department "He was too
good humored .•. too stable."
William Herbert Egnew Jr. perched
in a "foxhole-type'' crevice atop a 100.
foot cliff and began spraying .22 caliber
rifle bullets at pusing automobiles on
U.S. 410. At least 11 vehicles were hlt,
including an ambulance which had come
to take away one of the four person.s
wounded.
''Then I beard sometbing'hlt the win·
dow. • .and I saw a little hole in
the glass. I felt something on my arm,
like a blow . I remember thinking that
a rock hit the v.·indow. I put my hand
on my sleeve and there was blood."
Mrs. Pluewnarz. like the others who
were shot, was not seriously wounded.
The bullet was removed at a hospital
in Encumclaw, about 14 miles west of
here.
"At first, I thought my engine blew
up,'' said Jaques ?it Le.scan, 24, a llkl
instructor wounded in the loot by a
buJlet which pierced a vent window.
The other two wounded by bullets.
were Eug~ne H. Terrien of Steilacoom
and his son, Douglu, 12 who were on
their v.'ay to a skiing holiday.
Two other persons were cut by flying
glass from shattered windshields,
. I Newport .Freeway Election
I
George Flerro, a 17-year-old Huntington
Beach High School student, has been
named "Boy or the Year" by the Hun·
tington Beach Boys Club.
The Oller track athlete received the
honor for hls llervlce to the club.
"He's one of the few boys who doesn't
ask, 'How mucl\, do I get?' when we
ask him to do something," said Boys
Club Executive Director Pat Downey.
The umu.specting targets of the bar-
rage said after they never heard a
word from the youth, who only returned
their shouted pleas to stop !!hooting with
mo re bullets.
·•we were riding along just talking
about things, teenagers, drugs, things
like that," said Mrs. Mary C. Pluewnarz,
31, of Buckley, one of the victims.
"When they (the victims) came around
a curve to one side of him," said Capt.
Fred Pingry of the King County Sheriff's
Department, "he was looking right down
at their cars."
Two deputy sheriffs and a state trooper
"'orked their way up a Jogging road
behind the youth and approached him
from the rear.
DAILY l"IL.OT llffl l"htlte
Bo11ored
Alan Dirkin, lhe DA IL Y
PILOT's west Orange County
editor, has been awarded the
1970 Woodrow D. Cannon
Humanitarian Award for Press
\Vriting by the \Vest Orange
County United Crusade. Direc·
tors of the seven-community
organization also cited the
DAILY PILOT !or its 1970 cov·
erage of programs supported
by the crusade. Dirkin direct·
ed the coverage and wrote
many of the stories.
DAILY PILOT
OltAHGI COi.ST l"U•lllHINci COMl"Nl''t'
Jl•l>•rt H. W••' Ptnld111t •M ~'*lltlllt'
J•ck JI, Cur(.'(
Vkt ,ruldtiirt 8nd <>-•I Mtnltlf
Th•'"•• l(,,.,.j(
.!dllOt'
Tho'"11 A. MurJ1hift•
/NMglnf .Editor
Al111 Dirkh1
Wnt Orlf!lll c-1r Edl~
Alb1rt W. 11111
At'°"Lilo EdlMr
Hutt.,,._ 9MU Oftk• _.
11115 •••th .... 1 ..... ,,
M•lll119 Addr1n: P.O. 101 7t0, 92ti41
OtW °""'" l...,._. ••ell' m l"or•t A~ Cotti ,,...1; U) Wn1 1111 Strett
N1WPDM ••ch: l3l) HIWl!Ot1 8ou:w1... \ ~II ~N: ill$ MOMfl I.I Callllrlt ltNI
Tai•• .. •• 1714) 641-4121
Cl-"'"' '"'""'~'-' '42·1611
I
l · Shrouded by Legal Haze
"George practically lives at the Boys
Club and is extremely helpful with the
younger kids. He's even agreed to be
our janitor."
Valley Medical
Center Expands;
New Plans Told
When they could not gain young
Egnew'!! attention, "They threw a
snowball down al him, but there wall
no movement,'' Pingry said. "They in·
ched up and found him dead." A legal cloud will hang over the results
of Tuesday's freeway election in Newport
Beach no matter which way the votes
go.
To help clarify the issues on the ballot,
however, the following will explain what
will happen barring any possible court
action.
The first question, the initiative lo
rescind the agreement on street closing
along the route through Corona de! r.1ar,
is not binding on the City Council.
If a majority votes "yes" on the
tssue, the City Council, probably March
22, will meet to decide it it should,
in facl, follow the dictates of lhe elec·
torate and cancel the contract.
Although the Newport council , it!elf,
has supported a "no" vote, if a signlfi·
·cant majority votes to rescind the agree-
ment, it is expected to f.ollow their
wishes.
The second question , the City Charter
Deckhand Seized
After Speargun
Robbery, Kidnap
A teenager who said he W&ll Alaska·
bound, bu\ got only as far as a Newport.
Beach sportfishing dock was arrested
today In the kidnap-robbery of a wailer
abducted at speargun-point.
Investigators said the 16-year-old
suspect made the mistake of revealing
to his victim where he worked as a
deckhand.
Marlin L. Dart, of 2030YI Harbor
Boulevard, Costa fi.1esa, called police
after he was released unharmed at
Delaney's Sea Shanty restaurant, near
Davey 's Locker.
Investigator!! contacted the sportrillhing
and excursion boat firm, questioning
them about the possible sullpect.
The Long Beach youth was taken inlo
custody and admitted to Orange County
Juvenile Hall, pending determination of
charges to be brought against him.
Dart told police he picked up the
boy while hitch-hiking at 3:30 a.m. and
was invited into his motel room at
1977 Newport Blvd., Costa rt1esa. •
amendment requiring referendums any
time in the future the ct:tuncil wanlll
to llign a similar street-closing agree-
ment. must be sent to the California
Legislature for ratification if a majority
votes ''yes."
There is, however. no guarantee the
legislature will ratify the amendment
because of the significance and con-
troversy surrounding the proposition.
The legal and political implication!!
of both issues are far-reaching , and
if the mea!lures are carried u an~
ticipated. City Attorney Tully Seymour
has forecast the state, as well as private
interests. may challenge their enactment
In the courts.
On the other hand, should the council
not act on the rellcission should it pas!!
narrowly, the Freeway Fighters could
seek a court directive to force the action.
And if both measures fail, the Freeway
Fighters can also be expected to persist,
perhaps along legal avenue!!, to gain
their major objective - a new Pacific
Coast Freeway route through West
Newport.
Fifth Graders
To Tour Schools
Other boys cited by the club include
?i.1arc Beijer, 10, game room boy o(
the year: Gene Maurer, IO. camper
of the year: David Witt, 8, sportsman
of the year ; Barry \I/alts. 8, citizen
of the year: and Kent Martin, 8, most
spirited boy of the year.
Also singled out for awards were
Armando Reyes. 15. most improved boy
of lhe year; Terry Jackson, 12, or
the year, and Robert Butler, 16, judo
player of the year .
Alex Valdez. a 17-year old blind youth
from Garden Grove , received the club's
special award as blind judo player of
the year. Alex is a member of the
blind judo class taught by Downey, It
is the only class of its type in the
U.S.
New officers of the club are B 11 t
Peterson, president of the boa rd of direc-
tors : Jamel! Lange, secretary: Miss
Molly Tolson, treasurer, and Dr. \Vilfred
Cohen, vice-president of the board.
Plans for Fountain Valley'!! medical
center are expanding.
A !If.bed hospital ill now under con-
struction. Wednesday night. the city
Planning Comml!!ion will look at plan!!
for three medical buildings nest to it.
They f9und 51 shell casings fn tht
snow arolllld the body. One of the rifles
was equipped with a telescopic slghL
"From what we can gather, he'd never
been in any trouble," sald a police
officer.
Shoe Clerks Foil
Robbery Plan;
3 Under Arrest
City officials expect Fountain Valley
Community Hospital to open in Sep-
tember. lt's a single-story building on
five acre!!, with the first pbase ac·
commodating 114-beds and expansion
plans for another 128-bed unit. The same doctors -Fountain Valley Employes at a Huntington Center zhoe
?i.1edical Development -who are building store foiled a robbery plan over the
the hospital also plan to construct a weekend by turning in three persons
three-story medical tower on 3. 7 acres who had allegedly tried lo set up a
north of the hospital. robbery.
All of the medical buildings are near ~n custody at Huntington Beach City
the southeast comer of Warner Avenue Jail today on conspiracy to solicit rob-
and Euclid Street. bery charges are David Cornett, 25, Singer Kills Self; The three-story tower includes 38,400 of Torrance; Eugene Bruce, 2 3,
sq uare feet or space for medical offices tranllient: and Mary S. Tollillon, 23, of
W'f B b S bb d and 1,600 square feet for a pharmacy. 16853 Nichols St., Huntington Beach.
l e, 3 Y ta e Jt Is also planned fo r future et:pansion. Kinney Shoes workers said the trio
Dr. Maxwell Roston al!IO hall !lubmitted tried to talk them into "playing dumb''
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -Bruce Cloud, plan!! for a two-building, one-story during a robbery they allegedly planned
31 , a former singer with the Oom1noes, medical complex south of the hospital. for later Saturday.
stabbed hill wife and 2-year-old son to His unit hall room for 44 medical offices Instead, detectives from the police
Fifth grade children In the Huntington dea th and then took his own life, police of 1,000 square feet each. Jt will be department's Special Enforcement Detail
Beach City School District will get one· said Sunday. on five acres of land. were summoned. They arrested Bruce
day tours of Dwyer and Gisler in-Cloud's body \Vall round in his auto The planning commission meets al and the Tollison woman at her home
termediate schools this year in a new ln a park . Police said he apparently 7:30 p.m. Wednesday in city council after one or the men allegedly walked
orientation plan. v.·a! not able to kill himself with the chambers, Planners will look at precise out with shoes and other merchandise.
The tours are part of 8 district effort knife and ran a hose from the car's plans for the proposed medical offices Cornett was taken into custody later
to better prepare fifth graders for the exhaust pipe into the interior to pump and a public hearing will be held on that day when he returned to the store
switch from elementary school to In-1_in_c_ar_bo_n_m_o_n_ox_ld_e...:.g•_•_· _______ •_•_ch_. _____________ i_o_c_at_I _or_r_th_e_r_ob_be_:rycc'_d_•l_e_ct_iv..:e.:.• .:.":.:l.:.d._
termediate school when they enter the
sixth grade.
Each student will also be handed more
Information to carry home to parents,
orientating the whole family to the
change in schools.
District trustees will review the new
orientation plan when they meet at 8
p.m., Tuesday, in the library of Dwyer
School.
Parents complained I a s t year about
putting sixth graders with older children.
One of their. points was that thf: new
student!! weren't properly familiarized
with tbe intermediate schools.
CASH
LOANS
SA Firemnn Saves Ape
·In Lion Country Safari
"OLDEST AND EASIEST
_ WAY TO BORROW"
Borrow from $5 lo $I 00, •n<I
more, INSTANTLY. No rod
t•p•. no credit chech. Aft you
need is lin item for coUateraf.
NO EXLANATION NECESSARY.
• Co!Mfin and see wliat we
offer 0111 customers. A new
and unusual experience In
In s bop p In 9 enjoyment.
Where people in the know ·
save money every time tliey
buy.
A Sanl.t Ana fireman who jumped into
the sea lion pond at Lion Country Safari
Sunday to rescue a drowning baby glbbo"
ape ill credited with saving the
youngster's life.
Officials at the Laguna Hills animal
pruerve said Raymond E. Kavlalchuk,
37. was watching the antics of the sea
lions when he spott~ the little ape
which appartnUy had tumbled into the
water while playing on an island ln
the ctnttr of the pond.
Stripping off his shirt and 11hoes
Kowalchuk climbed lhe fence and plung·
ed Into the pond. which is about four
feet deep, to pluck out the unconsclow
victim.
(
I
ll v.·as identified as a year-old simiang,
a breed of gibbon ape, about two feet
tall and weighing 15 pounds.
While onlookers cheered, Kowalchuk
rushed the little ape lo the Uon Country
Mlmal nursery where a team of vet.a
'rorked to revive it.
The slmlang was held for observation
In the nursery for a ~uple of hours,
lhen relumed ta its illand home. ap-
parently none. the v.'orse for Ila acJ..
venture.
The sea lions, according to Lion Coun·
try officials, apparently ignored the en-
tire drama, Apes never go into water
voluntarUy. they noted, and the baby
undoubtedly tumbled in by accident while
It was cavorting on the bank.
All LOANS CONFIDENTIAL
•Fast •Friend~• Convenient
I 002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESj JEWELRY .... and LOAN
LOAN, IUT, SIU. TIADI •
838 NEWPORT BLVD· '!PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -ht•-H" ..... & Broodw•y
I
"
-
. ~~ _·_ ........... __ ·~ -. . ~ .
r
l:"1doJ. Mardi 8, 1971 H DAILY I'll.ff 3
Reward Set. N. Viets • Ill Trouble?
At$100,000
Red Chinese Premier Takes Mystery ·Trip
For Blast
WASHINGTON (Al') -CongreSBional
leaders announced today a $100,000
reward for Information leading to the
arrest and conviction of the person or
persons responalble for the bombing of
the Senate wing of the Capitol one week
ago.
Senate Republican Leader Huah Scot t
utd the rtward mODey was posted by
private donors whom he would not iden-
tify.
Scott and Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mans(leld N.ld the donors volun-
teered to put up the money which has
been placed in escrow in a bank.
Mansfield said the bank could not be
tdenUfied, either.
11le reward was announced after House
and Senate leaders met to discuss Sl!:Curi·
ty of the Capitol.
Mansfield said they agreed that the
Capitol police force should be made
fully professional, with no m o r e
patronage appointments.
Scott sai d he was not at liberty to
1ay whether investigators have any har d
leads in thei r hunt for whoever placed
• bomb in a men's room on the first noor of the Capitol.
11te bomb exploded in the early morn-
ing hours of March I, causing damage
estimated at $300,000. No one was in·
jured.
Mansfield and Scott Issued a state:-nf'nt
saying "any p!:rson or persons providing
information will be fully protected.
Sources of information will be regarded
as completely confidential."
They said anyone having infonnation
on the bombing should make it available
to any law enforce ment agency or of·
ficial, including local offices of the FBI.
Their forma1 statement said congre1-
1ional leaders "have been advllled that
the money has been made available
by private sources."
Scott, Mansfield, House Speaker Carl
Albert (D-Okla.), Rep. Hale Boggs (D-
La.), and Gerald R. Ford (R·Mich.),
the House ma jority and minority leaders;
and Sen. Alle n Ellender (D·La.), the
Senate president p~IP.m, all signed the
rtward aMouncement.
Ejected Youths
Spark SA Riot
A group of 1$ to 20 youths, thrown
out or a thea ter, created a minor riot
in Santa Ana'1 downtown section Sunday
nigbl
One 17-year-old boy was arrested for
breaking a drugstore window a t
Broadway and W. 4t h Street and taking
merchandise. Some display items were
also stolen from a jewelry store at
113 W. 4lh St., police reported.
Several store windows were smashed
but officers had no estimate ol the
dollar damage today.
The youths ha d been tossed out or
1he. Santa Ana Theater, Broadway and
W. 4th Street by aecurily guards f0<
disrupting a performance.
Police sa id they were ejected when
other patrons complained that they could
not hear the sound track.
DAILY PILOT ...... '1 Lei l'tnl
Here's Looking at You
On a clear day you can see Jeff Cabral. It you are Venus Ochoa.
Like a lot of other people, Jeff, ~. and Venus, 10, both of Stanton,
took advantage of the warm week~nd weather. They had fun in the
sun at Corona del Mar State Beach.
Many Poor Americans
Getting .Jolt From IRS
WASHINGTON (UPI) -Mllllons of amoun l each taxpayer owes.
Americans, many of them very poor,
will discover by April 15 that they owe
the government money because not
enough ta1:es were withheld from their
paychecks .
The Internal Revenue Service (lRS)
&Jid lhat-although a majority of all
taxpayera will qualify for a refund this
year as every year, some persons who
normally expect to get money back will
have to send a check along with their
returns thi s year.
The problem is a fallout from the
Tax Reform Act of 1969.
Al often see.ms the case in income
ta1. matters, the reasons for the problem
are comple1.. But they all stem from
the fact that withholding rates and actual
ta1. tales start from different assump-
tions.
There are about 25 brackets -ranging
from 14 to 70 percent of taxable Income
-on the government's income tax
rate schedule. Tb1s determines the
But there are only stx brackets -
ranging from 16 to 31 percent -on
the wllhholding schedule w h l c h
determines how much money actually
will be deducted from paychecks.
In addi tion, there is a differeoce in
the income bue for withholding a n d
actual tlxea. Tbe final tu ii applied
agalrult "las.able income" -eaminp
minus deducUons and the $625 personal
exemption for each member of the fami·
Jy. Withholding rates are applied against
earnings minus exemptions although the
rate structure is adj usted to account
for the 10 percent standard deduction.
All this, of course, has be en the situa-
tion for years. The difference this year
is the low income allowance which Con-
gress superimJ>GSed on the tax system a.'I
part of the Tu Reform Act. The pro-
vision removes from the ta1. rolls about
five million poor people. Returns no
longer are required for single persons
with incomes under •t,700 or from mar-
ried couples with incomu under '2,300
a year.
LONDON (UPI) -Nortb VlolnMI
dllclOlld today Iha\ ~ Communtot
-a... En-1§1 bad jmt vleltof
u.not in ~ with "U.S. 11·
p-enloo." Dlplqmall uJd the vltll -t
Hanoi II In trouble and WIDll help.
Fl'll dlplomaUc ·-of the W\U pected vlltt uJd Peldni In turn
b< determined not to a!Jow the Hanoi
1<glme to be jlefeatad mlUlar!ly or to
be weakened to the polnl of polltlcal
crtsb.
The dlplomaUc .._.ent uld the
Chou visit reflected the apparent cuccees
of the current U.S.-bacbd South Vlet-
nameae operation In Looi qalml the
Ho <lll Minh Trail.
The blgb level of the ~ mllllon,
lta composition, the time of. the v11.1.t
and not least the fact that Hanoi Wed
for the Cblnese leaden a!l Point to
new development of crlals '"'portlonl,
the assessment said.
Ju.I what Hanoi wanll and !llllt Pell·
lng ls ready to give remains a matter
f., speculation at tbll eerly lltqe of
the Sino-Vietnamese get-together, is-1ldng
all along has urged Hanoi to llO on
fll!hling to victory.
Nor wa,, it ruled out ""t a almtltrlr
compoaed Soviet mlsalon might go le
Hanoi -or, altemaUvefy, tha! top level
talb might be toUated In M-w.
Anything lea than that would mark
a clear shift by Hanoi to Pum,, at
the expense of MOscow.
Diplomata versed ln Far Eastern af.
fairs had little doubt the Vietnam war
is entering a new, auclal atqe with
as yet unpredictable conaequenoe..
Chou ha! not left Clllna for five years
or more. He quleUy dropped plans for
a visit to Afrlca last year.
Diplomatic sources noted that among
those accompanying hlm are not only
top party chiefs but also the de p u t y
chief of staff of the Chinese army.
The Hungarian news agency MI'I
quoted "Peking oblervera" u saying
Chou'• journey and hiJ talka In Hanoi
"came after the Chinese 1ovemment
declared it will take every meuure
to provide support to the peopleJ of
lndochina and will not allow the
Americana to do with thole peoples as
they please."
MTI aald the official Peking newspaper
Peoples Dally published a commentary
today warning that "the American acts
of aggression bear a threat to China,
which will not remain indifferent." It re-
ported a "sympathy demomtraUon of
millions" in favor of Chinese govern-
ment policy .
Peking hu Issued a serie1 of sharply
worded oUiclal Ollneae government
statements rondemning U.S. actlvitl!:I
ln Indochina and 1taUng It would not
stand Idly by but has made no apecUJc
· threat to 9end troops to Hanoi'• aid.
Hanoi radio today broadcast 1 stat..
ment . by the patriotic front of Laoa
warning the United Slat.ea that U U.S.
infantrymen enter Laos "the entire re-
sponsibility for the dangerous consequen-
ces arising from this adventurilttc act
will rest with the Nixon admlnistratlon."
M!:anwhile, in Paris chief Hanoi
negotiator Xuan Thuy told a group of
American pacifists that he had resumed
the long suspended secret peace negotia-
tions with President Nixon's chief peace
negotiator! a spokesman for the paclfllt
group 1&10 today.
Stan Dale of Chicago, a newaman
for radio staUon WDAJ tn the Chicago
area, sajd Xuan Thuy made the
...... llurtlll • meeUnc wttb -
E
the 17' Ameilcu pod&to cumnU,.
P1rll ler lllllllt>i with the dllopllo
thePlrilpw:ololb.
"Xuan Tbizy lokl us be bad met
l>ri••ltlf wllh Ambuaador (Dovill K.
lj.) i-11¥lrll UmOI," Doll told .,...,...D at a """ conference called
* * * * * * Reds Reporwd Mas8ing
For Laos Counter Blow
SAIGON (UPI) -Military ...,,_
uld tmltpl North Vietnam ii paurlDa
ellle ~ Into Laos to counter the
lfril<f IJliMI the Ho <lll Minh Trell
by the 240,000.man. South Vietnamese ""' f-. d"J>lle 1,000 llnnlt -"'~' have destroyed aoo supply Inds Ill the pall four d•JI.
/\ South Vietnam ... general r<ported
h1a forces had dutroyed 13,139 tonJ
cl Communlat munlllooo In 1-Tho
m ike agallllt the Ho Chi Minh aupply
trail appeared 10 succeuful China•
Communilt Premier Chou En-tat fie•
to Hanoi to dlacwls the lltuallon.
Military oources said the Nortll Vie~
namese reinforcements and supplies
were moving west of the normal supply
routes which were hit again todaiy by
flghter-bomben. Mo1< than 1,000 aortle1
were -llowl! again today by flghler-
bomben, helicopter pmbJps and supply
helicopters.
The military sources said Communist
truck traffic ov• the paat fow-or five
days had gone back to 1 level of l,lllO
to 1,500 vehicles per day from the low
point of 500 to 600 daily reported last
'11rund.ay by President Nb<on.
Lt. Gen. Hoan1 Xuan Lam, commander
of the South Vlelnamue lo•k force Ill
~ said the South vieui-bad
~ 1,341 Iona of ~ supplles
In the mooth-old opera1191! ... that truck
!raffle '°"th oo the ~ O!I Minh Tnll
had *II cut to a "~."
'"" -troop and -11 -from ~ Vie~ .... to the --Ind in41ittted I ..... 'counterattack by
tbe Notti Vie.._ WU In the Ollilnt· ~ eidt~~ ~. .l!gh\lng IO .~~ badtbe .,..q _..., -·we are mee-.
elite of the North Vietnamese troops."
New flljltln( bn>ke out mwnlbile
alon1 Roule t, the uil of the AJIVN
tbnlll into Laoo, and South Vlelnlmele•
armored unlll were lr1in8 to -the road to "relu aome of the preuuru
on U.S. helicopters." '111e road Ul heavily
mined and vulnerable to attack and
helicopters have been used exchlllvely
to take-In ----Lam told a news conference at hla:
Ham Nghl command post near the Lao-
tian border this was enough food and
armamenta to supply three Communllt
dlvlalon1 totallng 38,000 men for one
month.
The capture Saturday of the Ho OU
Minh Trail junction of 8epone, r7 miles
Inside Laoo, bas "clecreued trlfllc to
. • mlnlmum," Lam said.
One Lasi Trip
Girl Doesn't Know She's Doomed
BAV CITY. Mich. CUP!) -A rroup
of ICbool bul drivers In tbll central
Michigan communlly have started a
"Disneyland fund " for a •yell'-Old pt
with only monlha to llve.
The girl, 1ulferln8 from C)'lllc flhroall,
doesn't know a thlr)g about It and her
parent.I hive a1ked the newt media
not to reluae her name 10 lhe won't
find out.
"We want her lift to be 11 normal
u poalble," her mother, a school bus
driver herself, 1ald.
The idea ort1in1ted amon1 tbe driven
about three weeka ago. They managed
to keep It a secret from the mother
for about a week. She became auspicious
and began asking question1 when they
called a union meetlnJ without nollfym,
her.
"l'm a committeewoman for the union
and I'm tupposed to be one of the
first to know about any meetlnp," abe
aald.
Her flrat re.1cUoo upon learning her
fellow drivers were trytna to drum up
lllOUgb money to send her daurbttr
to Disneyland was one or surprile,
"II just amazes me bow ~ will
put the-lve1 out like th•~ • Ibo ·uld.
"You JUll "doD't upect It."
Wbell ...., llo• b9r d11llbl« -1d ruct ·u .......,. mane,-. It, coOecltd for
the lrip, she llfd:«'I kno!r she'll bl
real excited. Sbe'1 llw~ taWnt about &oin& IOmeplace.'~ ' ,
1'1le . Uver malfund.lon wu first
detectod by docton three yura ago,
although l)'lllploml llUch U I dJltanded
llomacb lint began 1ppearl111 before
the girl was a year old. Utile of her
lfver remains.
Her mother says, however, that she
lives a "perfecUy norD\11" Jlfe. Tht
third-grader atteodl ICbool almost daily
can't wait lo start rtdinl her br;;;;J
new bike once warm weather returns,
and has u many friends as most children
her qe.
"He only noticeable problem Is that
lhe 1et1 overtired 10met.imea," her
mother said.
El Rancho has the hottest price in town!
• •
• ..,
•
\ .. l
Ham Loaf .. ~YE.". ~E~~~ : .. 89~ . ·-~
Lean u..,ty ham, fresh around ... blended with whole fresh •ii!I !
Just shape and bake ... the f resh whole eg(!ll hold it together !
Fruit Salad . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 79'
Fresh fruit in a jar .• , at our delicnte!11en I Quart •
Kava Instant Coffee ................................. '1.59 ·
Save gOc on the big el1ht uupce.Jar ••• and ~njoy •· •
·.
IBPBIBP
John
Fresh .•. skinle" ... from the people who know about pork .•• Farmer John I Eiaht ounce packarea of ioodnes1.,. ao delightful 1
breakfast treat, with all your favorite g-o-tor ethers! Shop El Rancho thla week ••• and atart the day with a hearty breakfast!
' . . ' • --·
Pancake Mix .... ; . 39' Grapefruit ........... 29c
Pilt.bury make1 it ••• "Extra Light" ... 2 po und pnckarrel Bordo.,, opan the No. 808-can.aad aerve ripe 1weetaecUonal
Pric11 i?l cf/tct: Mon., Tuu., Wed.
Mar. 8, 9, 10. No Sa.ht to tUaltr1. Syrup .................. 69c
Vermont Maid ••• map!e-y aoodn-In the 24 oz. botUel
Pineapple Juice ........................................... 29«
Dole's ••• bli 48 os. can • , • aarve It chllltd for bruldu t delight!
Zee Napkins . . . .. . . . . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . .. . . . .. .. .. . . .. . . . . . . .. 1 o•
....Ja "Sunfnah" C<>lon to brl.rhten the table! , •• 60 c:t. pkf.
ARC ADIA: PASADENA: SOUTH P/1SADEHA: HUHT!NGTON BEACH: NEWPORT BEACll: :;n N••11 ... 1 a'"' ""1
Sunset and Hunhnglon Dr. (ll Rancho Ccnler) 32G l'Jcst Colorado Blvd. Fre1nont and Hunt1nglon Or VJ,irncr anJ f,i\1111Hp11n (llu,11!1\lj,dk I 1111111 ; /1'1 I t\!!111111 Dr (f 1\lbl111t W1:l.1Kc Crr11t1)
• }I ' I
• .
•
Mondi.11 March 8, 1m -
Israel Before ~ Afier War
• ' -v
JORDAN ,
Ceasefre agreements ran out along the Suez Canal
Sundly but observers are hopeful today that hostili·
ties won't break out in full force Truce is fragile
and pressure is being applied on both Egypt and
Israel to reach agreement. President Nixon bas .
pointedly called for an almost total withdrawal by
lreal from lands it captured in the 1967 war.
-Rolls Makes Big Layoff;
Lockheed Talks Continue
LONDON (AP) -The Rolls-Royce
C.O. announced today a big layoff of
workers as the U.S. and British
governments tried to work out the future
of the firm's RB211 jet engine.
Rupert Nicholson, the accountant nam-
ed io·Unravel Uie Roll!-Royce's financial
affairs, said 4,300 employts -many
of them white collar workers -would
Ia,,e .their jobs in the next three weeks.
~e...red:uCUon is independent of the
RB211 situation and does not take into
account the possible cancellation of the
IQlitL progJim," Nicholson said in a
statemenl
II the qine -buill for the Lockheed
Corp's Tristar airliner -is scrapped,
Rolla• layoffs will he much bigher.
The layoffs ~ Were ordettd at Roll!-
'Ro~ Plants at Derby and Barnoldswick
in Engtahd' and at Glasgow in Scotland.
The figure:reprtsents about lil percent
of the company's labor force.
Nicholson.announced the layoffs sbortly betOre Britain's aviation minister,
Frederick Corfielcl. was to make his
rtpOrt on ·prospect. of savlhg the RB211
... ' .
whose development costs caused the
financial crash which put Rolls into the
hands of a receivet: .._
The minister's report deals with his
negotiations in London last week with
Lockheed Chairman Daniel Haughton.
Laborite legislators ai"e demanding an
explanation, too, from Trade and
Industry Minister John Davies about the
effects of the Rolls layoffs.
Malcolm Muir, Rolls' aeroengine sales
manager in the United States, Oew into
London today from Lockheed's California
plant and· said the American firm was
"moving away from us" over the RB211.
Muir urged the government to contact
Locktieed urgently and "construct an
offe r which will meet the requirements
of the airlines which nave ordered the
Tr!Star.
Muir warned that the airlines -who
have been asked to pay more for the
Tri Star to absorb some of tbe RB2U 's
runaway development costs -would
not wait for p111tracled negotiations
between Lockheed and the British
government on a final price.
Big Day Near
Coxes to Attend Nixons' Party
W ASJONGTON (UPI) -President and Mrs. Nixon have invited the
family and friends of Edward Finch Cox to an "Irish evening at the White
house" March 16 at which they are expected to announce the engagement of
their daughter Tricia to the Harvard law student.
Mrs,. Nixon's S9th birthday fa11s on that date and there will be a joint
celebration. ·Guest of honor will be Prime Minister and Mrs. John Lynch of
-Jreland.
Invitations have been received by Col. and Airs. Howard Ellis Cos: and
by many of their 23-year-old son's friends. The wedding is expected to be held
'.in the White House about June 12.
Miss Ni.l:on, 2S, spent the weekend in New York with her rumored Hance.
A friend close to the family described the tall, handsome Cox as "very much
in love." Miss Nixon and "Fast Eddy,;' as he is known by friends for the
1peedy pace he keeps, met on a blind dete six years ago.
Cos:, a Princeton graduate who also attended Yale, has one more year
at Harvard for his law degree. After marriage, friends say the couple will
take an apartment In or near New York City.
•
British Subjects
Urged to Leave
East Pakistan
LONDON (AP) -The British govern·
ment has advised the 1,000 Britons in
East Pakistan to leave the country if
their presence is not essential because
.of the threat of civil war.
The Foreign Office said it had no
reports of any Britons being injured
in the turbulence that has gripped Dacca,
the capital of East Pakistan, for the
past week. But the advice to leave
was given by Deputy High Commissioner
Frank Sargeant as a precaution.
East Pakistan's political leader, Sheik
~1ujibur Rahman. and his Awami League
are locked in a struggle with the nation's
military president, Gen. Agha Moham-
med Yahya Khan, and the West
Pakistanis who dominate the central
government and the Army.
After a week of protest strikes and
violence in which at least 173 East
Pakistanis were killed, Sheik Mujib at
a mass meeting in Dacca Sunday ordered
a civil disobedience campaign to force
Yahya Khan to lift martial law and
return the army to its barracks.
Jet-age Prince
Leaves Palace
LONDON (UPI) -Prince Charles
traded his Buckingham Palace bachelor
pad for a Royal Air Force-approved
student residence today and bade
fareY:ell to civilian life for up to five
years.
The 22-year..ald heir to the British
throne was beginning a fiv~month
course In advanced flying training at
the RAF's college at Cranwell, lSO miles
north of L<lndon.
In September, he goes into the Royal
Navy for up to five years.
At Cranwell, the prince will have the
rank of night lieutenant and wtll have
to salute senior officers. At his own
request he will receive no pay. His
mess bills will be sent to Buckingham
Palace.
Charles will Jive in a college-approved
residence with three other students. Also
sharing the apartment will be the
prince's detective bodyguard .
Spring Warmup Expected
Calltornla
IY UNITEO 1'11:111 INTRltNATIONAL
so.,.111.,.,, c1w,n,i. w•1. t«Mr•l!Y. ftllP •tW lll"nr tOdi"V Wltto tOtnfl l(IQI
•111tv wlndl ln ti. mount•lftl. $NJOl><-
•I nlthl •nd momlnt fot W.I PrfVI•
1"'1 .t ~C111!1I 1rff1.
.... Anve!9o ..... me.Ur IU/11\Y wllll
-lllfll cklu(l1 1111'""""Md w1111
fo9 •nd low clo\lck 4urlr111 tM nl911t
•/Id mornlr111 ho\lro. Tiie temii.r1turt
w.1 coolt1" wftl\ • 10 Predidtd !or ttot
Civic Cent ... c»rft1,.red w!lll 15 $ulld•Y
.,.,., " t.lilftfed TUtMltY. Tiit low 10-nl•M j(I.
T ... Air Pall\lllon C:Olltrol Dlilr\d ,..
~ lltM llrlOf In tM Los Anttl••
.-in •Wl!ll rllt ml~lmum C.llWlt lt vtll
st .211 Hrtt -mllllon. 'V!1lllllllr tll\Md from two lo tour mlln .
~ ~ '°"9tftl Wll for mor1
fllt _Ill.,. wl!ll lllt hltllt In 1111
llltl'I 4iOl tnd low 19• In !ht c•t111
•nd lnftrlllt" •tfff. SOtnt "" •nd r-
clolld• wit to C011ll1111t 11onrt ti. -·"-Wh1c" _,. lrarn 10 to 7G m!!t1 111
flour tt lllt liM<M• •nd tM lll•llt
--lrtfl'I flJ "° ti llft<:t "" <lovclt (lffrtd. fllf ... ltr WI• J!,
Coastal
MOl11Y ll\j/111¥ todlY. Lllll'll Ytfleb!t
w!rld1 nl•M 1rtd momlf!tl "°"'"' l>Kom-
lnt '"'"''''' 10 la JO k/IO!i 111 111..,. "°'1"1 IOCllY •nd T .... 14.r. Hlfll lod•r
dO lo IJ.
COll!tl l""pe•1lulllt flllff lrofll ~
to ... lnltncl ttmPfrtlvrtJ r•nve trOl'I'!
.: lo l'O. W1t1r 1tmper11ur1 U.
V.S • .Summary
LOS ANGELES (UPIJ-T~t N1lioft.
11 wHl~er 1umm11~:
Rtlft llltnPWIM tllt P•<lrl~ Nor!ll·
w•1T IOll•r incl I~ ~PP8t" llH c.t nor1i..
•"'"'" 1t•re1, ltom Mld'olttn la Nrw
E"91111d fended oil "'' 11 ... 1 lllONY
'''" of • '•"""' ol l11tenMP ttorm1.
Mollftl1l11t wtrt rno11!v tllftnY wtlll
-111111 clO\ldt •1111 wlfldl 1rom IJ
t$ U mli., ti! llDl/r, Hillll wtl"f 111 .......
°""11 ....,.. MIMY wlll! tomt Mtll
(louft Ind wlrtd t\nl1.' Up~r VllllV
llltlll 111 tM 609.tlld tower vtlloly h.ltM
111 lllt n..
Sun, Mo"''·
Tr1vtl rtrNlned c1llllt111! lft l~t Tides G'"r Ltkfl rM!IOrl Incl "'!llln!ll" .,...., d .... 10 h1•vv 1now <oYt r 1"°
Hltl!J &Ufld.lv •1111 •rtellet1d 111t111 "°'
tltY l11el1.10t: L-tttdl 1 .. 10, S.11Uo
Monie• ~ 'av,..,. 14-1'. Ml. w11-..., 11~ Ptllnlllle U-.2. 1Uver1Jdt
IMt, Pllm $itrlMI to•l'll, a.kullltld
1..n., 1-tn DlfH U-4$, S•lltl l•rb9r1 ~ AM~1111 .t.n. 14-11.
I\
MONOAY wllld·drh tfl 1now llurrltl.
kooM 111•1> ,, ·•• 1:'''·'"• ,,0 Wl>ll_t fflil'I •"° ht tCI lft'tlft tMChtd ~ low 7:14t.m. '°·' cllto Into tr.. '°"th IM lucll"• nort11e•n
<:-TfJllOAY fl lOtktl, 1 wt rmlnt1 lrtfld bfoHn 01<41
llln Ntfl" ·.. .• , ... ,,00 t.m. S~ 1111 c.nlr1I •••I•, from lllt MllCll'n
F!rlf low ...• ':CIO 1,m, 1.9 '~" ot lllt RC)(kltt to M!11lu!11111.
15--.! 1>ftll .......... 1:4 a.ft\. ,.2 _ Tllll lfM'lllt w,mwP ••• ••N<l!'d
StcOlld lo'W" , , • • •• l :lt a.m . ..O.I It flow ittlw•rd tncl lul'llltr *'111,
SIMI ltltlt f :U 1.11>. Sth !tJS ''""' ~lint ttol frlt lf t lf Plltll'll clattr
Mo. Ill-J:U1""'' $lb ~ l'.rn. .. MllOfllt t1at1118.
'
Temperatures
TM!!lefllurn 1'111 prtclalt11!1orl fl'lr
lfl• 7~·hOllf ptrlOCI tlldl"9 1! ~ 11.m.
Arb'.llY
Albu<Wtroue
"'""/Ill An<:hor19'
Blsman;k
to11on
8rown1vlll1
llulfftlo
Clllc11111
CJnc:Jnna!I
Cl,,..~l•lld
0.llft
"""" De!"'11
F1lrbenk1
Honolulu
tlldl1n~l1
J11"H U
1<1nt.t1 (ilv l•• Vtt11
Lc.ubvn11
Mtmpl\11
Ml1m!
Mltw1ulo:H
MIM91POlll
N.-w OrlN l\I
N1w Votk
0ti.110rN Cli'r
""""' Pllllacltlll!li.
P-11
P~l1nd,Or1.
~IPld (I,.,. ·-S..C:r1m111lc.
!.!. Loul.l
l51Tt Ltk.f Cl,.,.
S..n DIMO
)tn Prtnd l(:O
$Mlllt
$oolt1nt W11111 .... 1an
Wllll\ll'tl
I I
.... tlllll L-Pl"f('.
l!i' 711 • .21
" " " " _, . " . " " .. 6
~1 17
" " 35 ii 47 ,.
" " » • u .. .,, .JO
" " " " 71 JI
~ " 61 31
~ " " " . " " " ,. .
" " ~ " •1 ,,
" " .. .. " .. .. " 3"1 ,,
" " " ,, " " . " " .. .... " .. " " u " " ..
. ..
·" .~ ·" ·" ·" ..
.. ,
,01
_,,
"'
.M ..
Suez Canal
But Cease-fire Ends With No Fighting
~
By tJnited Preis Jntel'llatioo.al
The Egyptian interior ministry•ordered
a partial blackout in Cairo today follow-
ing expiration of the Middle East cease-
fire at midnight. Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat warned Sunday of the
possibilty of Israeli reprisal raids against
Egypt.
Both Arab and Israeli troops were
on full alert the length of the 103·mile
Suez Canal, but hours after the truce
expired there were no reports that
hostilities had been resumed. Sadat
refused to extend the cease-fire but
diplomats believed a truce would con·
Unue on an bour-to-hour basis.
Official sources said the partial
blackout was ordered by lnterlor
Minister Sharawi Gomaa, underlining the
seriousness with which the government
views the situation. He also issued
"urgent. orders on civil defen se
measures" after a meeting with his
top aides.
A similar blackout order has been
nominally in effect since the 1967 Arab-
lsraeli war but many people paid little
attention to it.
Both Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban and Egyptian Foreign Minister
Mahmoud Riad were reported beginning
new initiatives to ease the Mideast situa·
Uon.
The Israeli afternoon newspapers
Maariv and Yedioth Aharonoth said
Eban would leave for the United St.ates
within eight days for talks in New York
with U.N. mediator Gunnar V. Jarring
and in Washington with President Nixon.
&th forecast increased U.S. pressure on
Israel to ease ft.! hard.line 1tand.
Cairo reports said Riad would can
in the Big Four envoys in Cairo to
discuSJ developments in the Mideast
situation and urge them to have their
countries shoulder responsibilities during
this critical stage.
Military analysts of the twe Israeli
newspapers said the real danger on the
canal now is bow local Egyptian com-
manders react to the new situation.
They said one mistake by a hot·headed
local commander could well start a
fourth Middle East war.
Israeli Deputy Premier Yigal Allon
told Israeli schoolchildren t o d a y
everything possible will be done to bring
peace to the Middle East and save
them being caught in the dr;P't.
He spoke to a gathering of high school
pupils in the Red Sea port of Eilat.
"We will try to make our political
struggle yield a durable peace treaty
which will assure the safety and honor
of all nations in the region," Allon said.
"We shall do everything possible for
you so that when you reach draft age
you shall have no more wars."
The only reported action was a clash
between Palestine guerrillas in Syria
and Israeli troops. An Israeli military
spokesman saJd "a number" of Jong-
range rockets fired by the guerrillas
from Syria slammed into a kibbutz on
the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights at
10 p.m. Sunday -two hours before
the cease-fire expired -but caused
no casualties. Israeli artillerymen return-
ed the fire.
Neither the Palestinian guerrillas nor
the Syrians officially accepted lhe cease-
fire, allhough the Syrians did not initiate
any fighting during the seven·month
truce.
Jn other fl.tiddle East developments:
-President Nixon, in an interview with
\JPJ White House correspandent Helen
Thomas, said both the United States
and Soviet Union are exerting "a
restraining eHort" to keep Egypt and
Israel apart. "Neither side will gain
and both will Jose" if hostilities resume,
Nixon said. The President said ad-
ministration foreign policy officials were
trying to get a llfW cei:ise-fire and "I
am cautiously optimistic on getting a
cease-fire.''
-Sadat, in a 28-minute television ad-
dress to the nation saying he would
Massive Backlog
not extend lbe cease-fire, announced he
had made a secret trip to Moscow March
1 to confer with Communist Party leader
Leonid l BreWnev, Premier Alexei N.
Kosygin and President ' Nikolai V.
Podgorny. "We discussed everything
clearly and frankly and I returned to
Cairo completely satisfied. . .and con-
fident the Soviet Union is maintaining
its positive support of our just struggle,"
he said.
-The Arab world generally greeted
with joy Sadat's announcement the truce
would not be officially extended. In
Lebanon, Palestinian refugees fired rifles
and pistols into the air to express their
jubilation. Both Syria and Jordan put
their military forces on full alert.
-Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban
said Israel would not open fire first
but would maintain the cease-fire en
a reciprocal basis. "The crux of the
matter now is whether fire is opened
or not,'' he said. A "voice of Israel"
radio commentator said "a situation has
been created along the Suez Canal where
any incident, however small, can lead
to a conflagration."
British Postal Strike
HaltedAfter 47 Days
LONDON (UPl) -Britain's postal
service creaked back into operation today
and began dealing with a backlog of
70 million pieces of mail accumulated
during a 47-day strike.
Postal officials estimated about It
million items were in the nation's inter-
nal pipeline waiting to be delivered
with another 60 n1illion items overseas
walling to come in.
The strike. one of the longest in British
history, cost the post office at least
$64 million.
The return of the mail was especially
welcomed by millions of pensioners,
many of whom do not have telephones.
Less happy with the envelopes falling
on the doorstep again Wf!re those who
went on buying sprees while temporarily
free of normal bills during the strike.
Banks reported countless accounts
were overdrawn during the past six
weeks while people, especially young
couples, forgot about bills and used the
extra cash to buy expensive items.
"It's the day of reckoning for many,"
said one bank manager. ·
The order for the postmen to return
to work came Sunday from Tom Jackson,
Another 18,SOO Navy men aboard the 7th
fleet vessels at sea were not Included
in the troop report but classified as
"part of the U.S. commitment to
Southeast Asia."
Level of Yanks
In S. Vietnam
Cut by 4,000
SAIGON (UPI) -The level of U.S.
troop strength Jn Vietnam declined by
4.000 men last week to its lowest point
sjnce October of 1966, the U.S. Military
Command said today.
Spokesmen said 322,200 American
servicemen were in the war zone as
of March 6. President Nixon has ordered
that American troop strength be reduced
to 234,000 men by May I under the
"Phase Six" redeployment program.
The latest figures showed there were
242,800 Army men in Vietnam along
with 4-0,900 airmen. 22.400 Marines, 16.000
Navy men and 100 Coast Guardsnien.
of your best ·
have a new address.
•
t '
~lendale Federal Savings
has moved to Harbor center.
Lock, stock and safe. People too.
We're now right on the
corner of Harbor Boulevard and
Wilson, so if you're looking for
Glenda le's famous friendly serv-
ice, esc.rows, Umpteen Ways To
Save or great new low rates on
home loans, look no· furth er.
Glendale Federal/Costa tv\esa
is just as nice as it ever was. And
lot~ more conven ient.
Wion.-Thur. 94;
Fri. 9-6.
• ~ -Cler.dale Federal Sav•ISS·COsla llWA
c..-at Hnor •"••di tam. Oltl!t arc..) • •
' j I
• •
" •
I
I
l
I
I
I
. . • • • • j * ,, . '
BEA ·ANDERSON, Editor !MMI.,, AUrdl I. tffl M ,_ U
Benefit Ideas Blooming
Styles Turn
With Season
Putting their .best foot forward are members or CHOC-ettes,
junior auxiliary to the LitUe Mermaid Guild of Huntington Beach.
They are inviting guests to join them when they Step Into
Spring during i dessert luncheon and fashion show taking place Sat·
urday, March 20, in the Fountain Valley Community Center.
Tickets now are on sale for the 1:30 p.m. benefit to raise funds
for Children's Hospital of Orange County, major philanthropic effort
of both the guild and auxiliary. ·
Senring__as__fashion show chairman is Adele h1oody, a'nd tickets
or reservations may be obtained by calling her or Jean· Wardell ;
842-8714. .
CHOC-ette members who \Viii promenade in · f3shions suitable
for spring and Easter include the Misses Moody, Ginny Roberts, Mar·
ian Barritt. Vicky Ridenour and Diane Barritt. Commenting on the lat-
ets styles from J. C. Penney's will be Janet Beek.
' .
Teenage daughters of guild members, CHOC-ettes help the hos·
pital through their volunteer services and fund-raising events. Since it
was organized as the first junior auxiliary in Orange County in 1966,
members . ~ave raised funds through the annual spring fashion show
and a pancake breakfast in the summer.
With the fun ds raised in past years they \Vere able to contribute
an infant's cradle warmer and a pool table to the hospital .
SPRING ARRIVES FASHIONABLY -CHOC·etles
will be Stepping Into S'pring S.lturday, March 20.
when they sponsor a dessert luncheon and fashion
show in the Fountain Valley Community Cen ter.
Selecting youthful styles for t~ccasion are (left
to right) Jean Wardell, president; Virginia Roberts.
model , and Adele Moody, show chairman.
•
Attain New Sta tus
Provisionals Reap
Rewards of Labor
Reaping the rewards of lheir labors \Viii be provisional members of
Tiara de Ninos, Huntington Beach .'\uxiliary, Children's ,Home Society.
They will attain active n1embership status Wednesday, l\1arch 17.
when a luncheon honoring them takes place in the Corona del Alar home of
Mrs. John ,Forte.
During their six-month training period the ne\v group \Vas respon·
sible for the success of the Chri stmas layette shower. They also earned serv·
ice hours by contributing their time to the November fashion show and more
recently, the Golf-a-thon.
A St. Patrick's Day theme will prevail at the luncheon where the
provisionals will be presented with their diplomas.
Directing the provisional program is 1t1rs. Gerald Brandewie, mem-
ber.ship chairman, and beco ming active auxiliary members will be the Mmes.
Harry Bedell, Thomas Balding, Donald Grose. William Irvine, John Kasser.
Joseph Kepner, George LogaJL Warren Peterkin, Charles \Vhite and Terrell
Zimmerman.
In the next activity following the luncheon 1.1rs. Richard Olson, presi·
dent, and Mrs . Carl Karn will begin preparation for CHS Week in Hunting·
ton Beach next month .
They will attend a city council meeting on April 19 to request coun-
ciJmen to declare CHS Week beginning April 26.
Auxiliary members will staff a booth in the main library during this
week to answer questions and distribute pamphlt:ts telling of the activities
of the society .
. Assisting \viJI. ~ th e new mem1?ers \vho will. be performing a maj or
function of the auxiliary: that of making the pubhc aware of the services
offered to both the adoptive parents, natural parents and children served by
the agency.
Also during the week • book about adoptions ·\vill be presented to
the library from Tiara de Ninos.
SCENE SET FOR ACTIVITY ·-One of the first al·
ficial duties as active members or 'I'i:ara de Ninos,
HU11tinglon Beach Auxiliary to.the Children's Home
Society, will be distributing information in the main
libnry during CHS Week next month. Mrs. Caxl
Karn' explains the procedure to provisionals Mrs.
Joseph Kepner and Mrs. Donald Grose Oell lo r1ghl).
They will become active during a luncheon in their
Among the lesser-known services to be stressed will be the free con·
fidential help offered to pregnant girls. A new film, ''I'm 17, I'm Pregnant
and 1 Don't Know What to Do" is available to groups or teachers for class-
room use by calling ens al 531·1147.
SEARCH, a program geared to rinding homes for medically handi-
capped or racially mixed babies, also will be explained.
DEAR ANN LANDERSo My husband
Is a husky, healthy 37.year-old man -
a perfect physical• specimen. Yet.. we
hive no social life, no home lire and
Yery little aex life. Why? Because he
sleeps all the time.
Whenever we go anyplace be asks
me to drive (even to the store) 90
he can aletp. He sleeps In front of
the TV, sleeps when we go to a movie,
sleeps during basketball games and bas
even fallen asleep playing poker. His
idea of a vacaUon 1s to crawl ln bed
and sleep for an hour or two three
times a day.
Three monUJ,s ago at my in&ste.ne1t
he had hi• thyrokl and blood sugar
checked and hil heart and Jtomach X·
rayed. When the .doclQr said, 1'He11
healthy as a horse," t asked, 11Why.
honor Wednesday, March 17. •
ANN LANDERS
does he sleep so much?" The answer
was, "He's probably tired.'' Ann, he.
doeln't lift a finger when he comes
home rrom work. Any suggestkms? -
MRS. RIP VAN WINKLE ,
nW MRS. RIP: Your "bealtb.y-tH·
bone" ll•1bud probably lla1 • metabelk
1ystt1Jt Uaat reqaires more ml tU•
mo1t people. Add to WI lbe po11lblUtJ
that lie 11 bored. Sleep caa be an escape.
Try this experiment ihe ne1t lime j)e
bor1e falls asleep oUtskle of btd( Wake
lllm up and ask him what he'd REALLY
like to do. U be 11y1 ''.sleep," I give
up.
DEAR ANN LANDERS : The letter
rrom the mother whose son was Reiling
hia homework prompted me to write.
1 am a te.a•r who hu had con-
siderable espe.rienct with cheaters. The
student who believes he can c o P[
.homelWOrk .ud gel away with it is..stupl . ..,-r is easy for a teacher to discern
t
..
. ., . . . ,. .. • . .. ..
Charmin .g a Real Sleeper
whi ch student prepared the original work TO BE COPIED:
and "'hich student copied it. You are clttallng the person who
At the beginning of each semester, copies. If he fails to do this as1lgament
1 announce th al any student Who copies -be d~;-.. not learn. If he does nol learn
<1r all<1~s his w-0rk to be copied will he cannot do well on bJs ei:am. A r e automatically get an F. I then hand
-0ul a memo so there will be no
misunderstanding . This has virtually
eliminated cheating in my classes. Of
course a few smarties have to test
me. but they soon discover I mean
busine". Print this if you like, but
no name or city, please. -ALBERT'S
TEACHER
DEAR TEACHER: Tbanks for your
Teller, and for the attached memo Which
I would like to reprlnt.
M~MO TO THOSE WHO
ALLOW THEIR WORK
you being fair to him?
You are cheating the classmate who
hat NOT done his assignment but Is
hon est enough to admit It. Tbls per10n,
though unprepared, Is at least assuming
responsibility for himself. Are you belag
fair lo him? • You are taking a chance on being
fe.,nd o,.ut Ind r:ecetvln& n r. ~you
being fair lo your1eU?
l\tEMO TO TllOSE WllO
-COPY Fllj)M OTllEI\$'
You are cheating the person wbo has
doot the WOfk. If lat Ce&I caucbt f.lt ;
gets u 'F. Are you btln1 fair &o him?
v .......... ..., .... _,.11e:
bas NOT done Ids wort but 11 bontst;
enoagll to take rttpo•lblllty for himself.:
Art you belag fair to '1m? • • You are not getttnc ~ htaeflt or :
learning nor will you be able to pu•:
Ole ei:am whea the time comes. Att ;
you being falr lo )'OUl'ldf!
Do you feel ill at ease . . . out of ;
It? Is everybody having a good l,lmt •
bot yoo? Wrii.-fot-Ann Llindm-1<1, ~
''The Key to Popularity, 1' enclosing with
your request 35 cents in coin and a •
\Ong, NJ(-addttssed, stamped envelope .•
in care or the DAILY PILOT.
•
•
..
'ff DAJLY PILOT Mond11, M11<h a. an
..
>~
• .
.....
• l 3 :
!
' j
' , ,
' ' ,
' .
' ' ' • '
' '
Effervescent Bubble Brunch Aids
Sparkling with enthusiasm are Mrs. Edward Dziura-
\\'iec (left) and Mrs. Ardis Barkley, members of the
Altrusa Club of Newport Harbor. The club will spon·
sor a champagne Bubble Bruhch at 11:30 a,m. Sun·
day, .fl.1arch 14, in the Costa Mesa Country Club.
Let's Talk Girl Talk
"SCOUTING ABOtrf" is the Eighty-two girls r r om
.§. tllle o[ a program planned J by Girl Seoul troops of Irvine
1 School in East Irvine from ! 7 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, l f.\arch 9, in the mullipurpose
Brownie troops 144 and 54.6,
Junior troop 1860 and Cadette
troop 665 will participate.
Chairmen for the event are
Mrs. Earl Harwell and r-.1rs.
Steven Bosbonis . ; room
.a. D. HOWES
IS
HAVING
A
SALE
i
B. D. HOWES and SON
fl="tJtYTtLtRS FOR. THRtt Gf.:-OtRATlO:-<S
NE\Yl'ORT BE.\,H: 1412 Via Li do • 675· 27'1
Philanthropies
Proceeds will be used for the Harbor Area Boys and
Girls Clubs, Youth Employment Service, March of
Dimes and other worthy causes. Ticket information
ma y be obtained by calling Mrs. Sandy Carlson .
Double Ring Rite
Afternoon Vows Said
Reciting their wedding vows .... -.•1•--
in the Community Congrega-
tional Church of Corona del
Mar were Christine Sue Callis
and Scott Dillman Rhorer.
Officiating for the afternoon
double ring ceremony was the
Rev. Dr. Phillip Murray.
The bride, daughter of the
late Robert L. Callis and Mrs.
John King Malco mson, was
gi ven in marriage by her step-
father . Parents of the
bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs
Milton Rhorer of Phoenix.
Attending the pair were
Mis.~ Nancy Makely as maid
of honor and David Haines
of Phoenix as best man .
Ushers were Robert and
William Callis, brothers of the
bride .
A 1968 Chilrlren·~ Homt
Society debutante. the brirle
was graduated from Corona
del Mar _..High School ancl at-
tended Northern A r i z on a
Uni versi!y, where she was a
member of Alpha Delta Pi.
Her husband is a graduate
·-
MRS, SCOTT RHORER
Phoenix Home
or that university and an ar-
filiate of Sigma Chi.
The Rhorers will make their
home in Phoenix.
Volunteers Prog ram med
Bureau Picks Leaders
Link ing people in 11eed and
nonprofit assistance agencies
i~ the job of the. Volunteer
Bureiiu of West 0 r a n Jl, e
County. whi ch provi des the
personnel lo staff the assorted
i'iervice groups .
During a noon luncheon
tomorrow. burellU members
will meet in the Orange home
of Mrs. Robert Glass to honor
nrw officers for the coming
year,
T11king office will be .Jilt'!
Kle in. presideRI ; Miss Beverly
Webb. vice president; Mrs.
Charle:r;. .Jennette, secretary
and Mr~. William Suter,
treasu rer.
The Volunteer Bu re au ,
located in Garden Grove. is
entering it:i;. fourth year of
recruiting. ~creening a11d plac-
ing voluntee[S, arranging
emergency transportation
through social workers and
assisting agencies with mall-
ing.
Visit the Elizabeth Arden Red Door
' •
_...:rn.--11/fJflA-!'J
...,. --
., • lQ [QI '
it'.s a beautifyi ng ex perieQce
Let our experts give your skin
a wonderfully refreshing treat-
ment .•• and a new make-up.
You'll not only look your
best, you 'll ieel marvelous!
Complete treatment with
makeup, 10.00.
f..\anicufe!i •Pedicures • Facials
• E.J«.trolr.iis
' t--·i--~~~-l+--+-1-ll-[]~ ~
You r Horoscope Tomorro w
Pisces: Refuse l·nti ·midation
TUESDAY
MARCH q
By SYDNEY OMARR
Astrology buff clubs are
1prlnging up around lbe coun-
try. One of the leading groups
cond11ct1 rtgular meetings In
Los Angeles, featuring gue1t
1peaker1 who relate late1t fin-
dla11 In 111rology. Surprising
to many, numerous prominent
bu1lne11men attend these cott·
labs, a1on1 with c o I I e I e
1tudedt1 and a daiiling array
of britb_t, attractive career
women.
ARIES (March 21-April 191:
Original Ideas pay off. By
being inventive, you tum a
profit. Don't be afraid In
brtak through In new, fertile
territ.ory. Utilize n at u r a I
pioneering qualities. Make a
mark.
TAURUS (April 20-May 20):
Accept re sponsibilit y. Pace
may be slow; goal, however,
is worthwhile. Stress is on
how )'OU handle home, pro-
perty, domestic stiuations.
Aim for (uture. Realize poten·
tial.
GEMINI (May 21-June 20):
Don't at t em pt lo be
everywhere at once. Avoid
scattering you r forces. Ex-
change ideas with neighbors,
relatives. A void arguing over
minor matters. Plenty of fun
now-If )IOU-are flexible.
CANCER (June 21 .July 22):
Don't spend merely to impress
others. Get what you need.
Obtain money's wcrth. lnsist
en quality. One who makes
many promises could come
up empty-handed . Anticipate--
act accordingl y.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You
find way of fulfilling some
obligations, ambitions . Utiti~e
experience. l· m p r e s s pro-
Luncheon
Speaker
Intrigues
handicap Is due to be remov·
ed.
fessional superior by polishing lF TODAY JS Y O U R
techniques. S p e c Jal re la-BIRTHDAY you are capable
tionship is cemented. You or perceiving trends. You can
learn where you stand. provide wha t others need ,,.To~ °!':i.:. "'l:'.t ti;~, to;y~~ VIRGO (Aug. ~Sept. 22): 0m1rr'• ti.oit1t1, •'Sec"t Hlft'• ..,,
Coo perative efforts should be before they become aware ~,:,11 /and,.~~~,..~~ %~~=~
.dvoc.ted' Heed One who has flf actual requirements. Social *~"· ,,.. DAILY PILOT. 10 • .ltA life improves. An emotional Grind c.mr11 sl111on, N..,. vonr.
a i d e d y o u i n p a s t ···----------;;;;i;'i;.vi;"i;i"ii;";i;' -------. Phil~phlcal concepts are11
emphasized. Look beyond t,tie!
immediate. Be concerned with
potential. I
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl 22):
Funds you look for granted !
could be held up in litigation .
Plan accordingly. New view ,
is essential. Highlight different
methods. Leo individual could
prove to be valuable ally.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21):
Contractual obligations surge
1.0 forefrQnt. You get nothing
for nothing. Know this -
share know I edge. Obtain!
cooperation of one who can
aid you r cause. Aim high -
stick to principles.
SAGITTARIUS (Nov. 22-
Dec. 21 ): Some person s
perform extraordinarily well
for you . Give them credit.I
Extend soc i a I invitalions.,
Time to show appreciation .
1
'
Change Of pace is beneficial.
Relax -have fun . I
CAPRICORN (Dec, 22-Jan.1
19): Money, past com-,
mitments mingle. Keep guardl
up; proteCt yourself. Some are1 envious, even spiteful. Don't
1 compound error. Mai n ta i n1 balance. Dispatch tasks with
-aplomb. ·1
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Lie low ; do plenty flf
listening. observing. Practical
Issues dominate. Home, pro-I
perty areas demand attention.
Do some investigating. Write.
communicate. Ask plenty of
questions.
PISCES (Feb. 19 ~March
20): Relative may make.
unreasonable demands. Seekl
adjustment in domestic area.
But refuse to be intimidated .
Be diplomatic. P.1 a k e in-1
telligent concessions. B u t
know when to draw line.
~~'""I-~'!"'
t' 1,000'1 OF OIL PAJHTIN.GS "'f"
WHOLESALE WA•IHOUSI
'I
OPEN TO THI PUILIC 1
50°/o OFF • 111t I , llOINGI•, SANTA ANA ~· ......... w.-
(!!» C1·own1ng Glory
b eauty s alons
The new longer. look! Beautifully
curled by our carefree perm. Compl ete
BUDGET PERM ••.... olw•v• $595
(Normal Hair)
MonTunW•' l11'rW11k
SHAMPOO-SET
STYLE CUT
295 , " 3••
200
Stylist J)rices 1!iqhtty higher
SOUTH COAST PU.ZA 267 I l ltti" ST .• COSTA MISA
Low1 t lev1l-.Naxi lo Se.in Phone 548-ttlt
Phon1 546·71 I & Op1n Eve11intJ1° l Sund•v
Op1n Ev1nin91
W1 CARIE 1toolll you! Loot '(twr bull
fl ll.l.Lll:I WA.NTIG ~,._
Members won't need a si1thl~iiiiiiii;;~~""ii;ii;iiii;ii~~
sense to lure them to Mesa w h SALE )-{arbor Club's luncheon on
!J'hursday, March 11. in the I re ouse Mesa Verde Country Club.
F.atured " speaker for lhe
way at 10:30 a.m .. is Mrs oe<asion. which will get under SAVE Up TO. sao .!
Beverly Delong, whoSe an-
nounced topic is ESP -
EsJ>Jeially for You.
. Affiliated wilh the Psynelics CALO RI c· Foundation of Orange, Mrs.
Delong will talk about extra·
sensory perception and osplain CLEANS BOTH OVENS how tn develop it. She plans
tn demonstrate her own ESP AUTOM'.AT.'/CALLYJ ability on members of the
luncheon audiehce.
Church Plans
Three-day Sale
A wide range of item~ will
be available whe111 members
cf St. Anne·~ Church, Seal
. Beach, open the doors of the
parish hall for their annual
rummage sale on Thursday.
March 11.
Co-chainnen for the sale.
which will continue through
March· 13 are Mrs. Michael
Spigak and Mrs. Victor Vini.
Hours will be from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Evenings
Go Casual
The evenin g c a r ·t1 i a an
typifies today's casual way
dre55ing for lnlimate lillle din~
ners or at-hrimc parties .
. Monet SURgests ttighlighting
the look wilh a tiered tassel.
'
.,,, ..... _," """""'' .. ·-·
..............
fash ion school ...
l•••rlH Kelley
charm fa11hion & modellng
rnr boy!! & i:irls . cl11s:r;.l"!l ht~in M11rrh 15.
call rnr rf'SPrv11tiona: .,.... ...
tlw t11•ot 1ltll1h1h11l)' 11n111u•1
thll1lrr.11'• ,1.rr In 1ht. M11~l1nd
168'11 AIKO!Uf'lin ~I.
lll''Ol'i1:Tn11 el.l.f"tt
(114) 146-1666
T~ ULTRA-CLEAN ''Pyrolytic'' Self·Cleanlng system of Calo11c Gas Ranges cleans the Lower Broller/Ov1n and th11 removable sides. bacli: and bottom panels of tile up1>9r oven completely. thoroughly, totally-autol'T\allcatJy, In Jess than..)
hollr1, fat less than a nickel ai"fiormar Olis rates .
PLUS: e UL TR.A-RAY e inf re-red broil er
cherbroih meets, smokele's e Autametic meet probe
'
• Tim ed cook & keep warm oveQ a Rotisserie e Load•d with extras
SAYE $$ ON DISCONTINUED MODELS
CALORIC GAS
RANGES AS LOW AS
FLOOR SAMPL~S •• c DEMOS NOW
REDUCED TO CLEAR ! $11rs
fnte9rlt11 and De pe 11doblllt 11 Sl11ce 19'11
411 I. Snentetnth St. -' 646°1 68 4 dally t.t Sat. 9·6
Lo;uno Hllll Pion
IHI'•• h\'0011)
837·3830 delly 10·6 M/F l D·f
I
I
J
. .
1 ; .
Fountai•• ·valley·:. Teday'a Flaal·
N. Y. St.oclu
,
VOL 64, NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1971 TEN CENTS
Court ,Bpiirns Qraftees' Viet War Ojectiolis
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused today to allow draftees
to claim conscientious objector statlUI
because of opposition to a specific war·
suet> as Vietnam. The vote was 8 to
I wilh justice William O. Douglas dissen-
ting.
Jn the majority opinion in two test
cases, Justlce Thurgood M a r s h 'a 11
declared that Congress in enacting the
Selective Service Law intended to exempt
Youth, 16,
Heldhy FBI
In Hijack
Pi.fIAM1 (AP) -A 16-year-old high
school sophomore today boarded a Na-
tional Airlines jet at Mobile, Ala .,
presented the stt:wardess a pistol instead
of a ticket. and forced the crew to
fly him to Miami , where he surrendt;!red
peacefully.
Thomas Kelly Marston was charged
with aircraft piracy and held by federal
marshals at Miami for return to Mobile.
A National spokesman said the youth
surrendered to FBI agents "without any
trouble" when the 727 landed at Miami
shortly before noon, EST.
only persons "who oppose participation
in . all wan -participation in war.. in
any form ."
Of the argument .that a di'iftee ahoold
be able to single out a partlcu1ar war
as grounds fQr consci~ntious obj~tlon,
Marshall wrote:
"'Persons who object solely to
participation in a. P,articµlar war are
not ·within the purview of the exempting
seCtion evtn .thciugh the latter obje(:tibn
ffi!IY have · such roots• ic a claimant.'.11
l
conscience and personallt:1 that It Us
reUj:tous in character.·•
Iii his dissent , Douglas said of the
mijority ruling: "Conscience is
repul1iate<l , . . the court his done
violence to the basic philosophy of the
firs1 amendment and we take a s•~p
backward."
· The decisions upheld lower court rul·
ings against two men who refused to
ser\'e in Vietnam. ..
I
FRAZIER, LEFT, SAYS HE'S COOL, THEN BOMB SCARE
Muhammad All, Ever Confident, Punches Small Bag
Guy Porter Gillette of New York City
was sentenced to two years in pri&on
for refusing to rwart for indiJCtion. Louis
A. Negte or Ba~ersfield, Calif., sought
to get out of the servibe after be had .
been drafted. · '
Mafshall saiCI ihat the court was not
suggesting that Congress could not have
decided to exempt those who object
to a particular· War· bUt was ·determining
there was a "heutral, secular justifica·
lion" for the law as written.
ln other major acliolll, the court:
-~ci(l.ed Qn a tie, 4-4, vote _to l~t
stand a ruling by Maryland's hiahest
court that the controversial Swed.Ush flinl,
"I Am CUriOWI (Yellow)", was obscene.
The lie vote did not set 'a high -court
precedent In faw but merely affirmed
the s.tate <.'Ourt judgment. ·
-Refused to hear an appeal by atheist
Med.tlyn MWTay O'Hair who claimed
the astronaut£ on the Apollo a and Apollo
II fiighu to the moon improperly lnj<cted
religiow activities into their operations.
-Declined !qr the tjme being to further
con!lder a case challenging lhe practices
of 35 states to permit greater spendln&
of tar money In wealthy school districts
than . in poor ones. The justices sent
· a ·test ciise back to Florida for further
proceeding_s.
69 C.ent Decision . . '
Beach -School Tax Rate_ Eoting _Sel
By RUDI NIEDZIE!.'>KI
Ot .... 0.llJ ,, .. , Sltff
Voters in the Huntington Beach Union
High School Distiict will be asked W
go to the polls again Tuesday. this
time to decide the fate of a 69--cent
tax hike
Polls will be open from 8 a.m. to
8 p.m. at FountJ;in Valley, Huntington
Beach, Ocean View. Seal Beaeh · and
Westminster elementary schools. Polls
will also be open at Seal Beach-Leisure
World clubhoUses. ·
Schoolme11 have characterized the elec-
tion as crucial to the survival of the
six-campus district.
lf it Is approved, the current Sl.39
lax rate would be raised to $2.08 per
$100 of assessed valuation while the
current educational · program· is main-
tained .
Failure. to win over the voters to
the issue would mean' a reduction of
laxes to the state-mandated minimuin
of SS-Cents per $100 of assessed valuation.
District officials have· predicted the
85-cent rate would result In a "starvation
budget '.' for lhe district.
They claim that accreditation of -the
district would be seriously jeopardized
and that students could find It difficu lt
to e.nter·tnstitutlons of higher leartllng'."
Trustees have already studied several
cost-cuttlng measures in case the
measure fails. These Include reduction
of school days to one-half day, a decr~l~
ln coun·se11flg serViCi ind lntructional
materials, an increa5e In class size and
elimination of . 1pecial programs, bwJ
transportation, and interscbool athletics.
The curr.ent election ls the district's
third try at • tax override 1n the past
two years. A 69-<:ent tax measure failed
Nov. 3, 1970, and a 5()..ant measure
failed in February of 1970.
The only organized opposition to
i;urface has been the Council On Sensible
Taxat.lon (COST), headed by Misa Claire
Kelley, an interior decorator from Hun·
tington Beach.
Although COST has not revealed the
exact extenl of ita membership, the
group has argued that lncreasea in the
assessed valuation of the district should
keep the tax rate steady without reduclna
l>Jld&eJs_. ----1n addition, COST members said they
would favor cuta in administrative coatl
and salaries rather than a reduction
of the educational program. The flight ended almost three hours
after FBI agents said the youth boarded
the pl~ne at Mobile, ordered 38
passengers and four stewardesses off
and demanded to be nown to Canada.
He changed his mind over Tennesstt
and allowed the crew to fly him to
Miami. The only persons aboard with
him were Capt. Robert Carter, co-pilot
Jack Graham and Flight Engineer Jerry
Gemma.
Security,_T'}nsion .l!igh.-. :~x~ .K.Wnape~f 4 ·Ai~men
For Title Fight Tonight Coast Firms' s'aid 'Pro Guerrillas'
Carter told newsmen at Miami the
youth said he wanted to go to Canada
because he was getting bad grades and
his parents were on his back.
Carter said the boy Y.'Ss very frighten·
ed. "He said he just wanted to get
out of Mobile. We told him if he would
let us return him there. it would go
easier on him. He told us Mobile was
the last place he wanted to go."
Carter said he soon became confident
he could talk the boy into changing
bis mind.
"We kepl talking," he said, "and when
we were over Knoicvi\le I told him that
anytime he decided to change his mind,
just let us know. I tur ned around and
looked at him and he handed me his
gun."
At Mobile, 1-farston's father , MerriU
H. Marston. said his so n had gotten
up and left home for school at 6 a.m.
"f\1uch earlier than usual." He said his
son was an average stu dent but declined
to discuss the morning's events.
The boy was wearing his school clothes,
a beige jac;ket and blue shirt when
he boarded the plane, authorities said.
They also said the s-root-9. 150-pound
youth was armed w i I h a .38-caliber,
chrome-plated pistol.
NEW YORK (UPI) -Joe Frazier
and Ca&sius CUty weighed in at the
heaviest of their liVe.! tod.aJ,1 for their
heavyweight champion.shi p bout m
Afadison Square Gorden tonight.
Frazier came in at 205% pound.!,
and he was foUowed to the scalt's an
hour and a half later bU the 215 ·
pound Ci<ly.
"I'm going to straighten it all out
tonight," Clay shout.td 14 the mob of
reporters and hangers-on.
NEW YORK (AP) -A' vague bomb
scare, a reported threat WI Joe Frazier's
life and tishten@d lleCW'ity measures ad·
ded to the theatrical atmosphere as
tension mounted for t o n I 8 h t ' s
heavyweight title fight 'between Frazier
and Muhammad Ali (~ sports, Page
23).
Eight detectives were said to be
guardlng Frazier and his manager,
Yancey'Durham, after tht heavyweight
champion reportedly received a letter
and later an aMnymou~ telephone call
threatening his life if he did ·not throw
the fight.
Frazier as well as bis manager were
in hiding, not available for comment.
A source close to Frazier, however,
insisted that the threats were made.
Also another report circlflated Sunday
that the City Squire Motor lnn at Seventh
Avenue and 52nd Street. Frazier's normal
New York headquarters, had· received
a bomb threat.
The same Frazier spurce said that
the threat was checked out but no bomb
was found . Five hundred special police
have been assigned to Madison Square
Garden.
Both Frazier and Muhammad Ali con-
tributed to the cloak-aqd.dagger at·
mosphere surrounding the projected $30
million spectacular when they broke
camp Saturday nigh t, came to New York
and immediately went into hiding.
Both .were unavailable to newsmen.
However, the garruJous and outg<iing
Ali walked the Manhattan streets Sunda,y,
entere(I coffee shops. chatted and signed
autographs for admirers end even paid
a visit to Madison Square Garden, scene
of the fight.
Threats and rumors for yea rs have
been routine at big heavyweight fights ,
most of them regarded as the work
of pranksters and fanatics. Few are
taken seriously. Although Capt Carter said Miorston
told him he didn't have any problems
with a broken romance. alrµort police
1aid lhe youth was accompanied to the
Mobile airport by an attractive girl.
They said the couple started toward
the boarding ramp. stopped arid appeared
to argue. Then the girl turned and ran
through the gate while the youth boarded
the Plane, they said.
* *' '* "'t? * * * Beme1nher Radio?
1 Station Pries Into Blackout
SAW oman Killed
In Huntington
Auto Collision
You may have 'watched America's
astronauts plant Old Glory on the moon
via home television but you won't get
sJmilar treatment ·for the heralded
"Fight of the Century" from New York
City tonlghl.
Home television ls blacked ·out this
evening when two · pi:ize fighte~s known
as "Smokin' Joe" trailer and MUham·
mad "The Mouth" AU battle It out A 33-year-old woman was fatally in-at-7:30 p.m. our lime for the undis)uted
'jurtd nver the weekend when a car bea\. ··1eight championship of !ht world.
driven by her !Wn collided with a pickup Rr\· ·'· too, ha s had ill wir~s c_bopped
truck at a Hunt ington Beach lnlersection. at r:· • ;i,,._
Offirers sa id Mrs. Maryanne J. Heagle, T~ e is one excepUon wherein a
of Santa Ana. was pronounced dead roun<.: i:l)l·round recap of what's.jUn hap-
on arrh•al at Huntington lntercommunity pened will be brGldcut trom a powerful
Hospital shor tly after the 12:30 .p.m. little multi·wattcr Mlthm situated In
accident Saturday. beautiful downtown Burbank:
Her son, George E. Heagle. 17, was Station KBBQ of Burbank will start
driving north on Main Street when tJ'le broadcasting prt-fight dopr. tonllht at
pickup. driven by Arthur E. Reynolds. 7:05 o'clock and then at '7'.30 begin
$1 . of 17621 Gothard St., collided with recapping each ri>uod as Frazier Jnd
the Hea~lt:! car, according to police. All co Ill it in Madison Square Garden.
Mrs. Heagle receivtd massive lnJurits All this comea ebout because RBBQ
when •b ..__he a11oin11l..Y!O..J!l:c.....JLLlDtDll>tl:-oiUbeJ411111&1 Nelw0<k
strumcnt pant\, Investigators aald. whk:b hu a speflal lint: In at rtngside.
Reynolds. uninjured. was c1ttd for They didn't gel lt wtthout a court fight
failure to yield right of way at a posted lirtt before the real fight.
lnl ersection. Admittedly, this i1n't 1olng tn be the
Heagle and his other passenger, 17· perfect-aolutioo for blacktcklul Southern yc~r-old Ronald Bays of WestmlMter. Ctllfornlan1. , '
suffered on ly mlrwr lnjuires in the col· "OUr signal ts a bit dlrficull lo pick
lision. up." 1 KBBQ spoke1m1n admitted to
\
the DAILY PILOT today . "We have
a i;ix-tower pattern but we have to
weaken our signal down your way to
prot!Ct a MeXIC'an station." # ~ •
To clarify the technical talk, the KBBQ
spokesman suggests fight followers can
tun\'! them in ' at 1000 pn tht AM dial
-"just lo the left of KPOL at 1540."
For fight fanalics who just can't
fatliom. aJI this. there·· is always the
closed-circuit television in theaters and
auditOriums sOmewhert near you. Fifteen
buc)ts a seat . for the b\ack-and-white
picture and If you insist on color video,
lhe scat scale is m. ,$20, $16 and $10.
Of course. at those prices you run
the risk one of . the principalt' might
faint during Round 2 or maybe even
durtng pre.fight instruCtions. • -
Meanwhile for home. television fans,
stations seem uniformly vague on bow
they will cover tht Battle af. the Ch111m-
plons. · •
• Spokeimen for channels 2 and 11 say
tnty will run 1 printed tape aJ1ing the
bot~ of their qu1U•J)l:Olfa111 . Qic·
tures to te.11:-· who hit Who ·when, or
who fell down.
Folks at channels 4 and 5 think they
may transmit words too, An offlc1al
at Channel 7 said it's a li,U.le"'\f>o early
to lell wh•l they11 do -Ir anylb!ni. •
So there yO\I have It. fjgRt filn&.
Burbank may be lht only answer.
•• \ . •
Space Pacts
The federal governmenr has extended
contracts for stUdy of a 11-man Orbit~I
i;pace station. guarantetins jobs for some
aerospace workers in Seal Beach and
Huntington Beach for another 10 months.
Rep. Craig Hosmer <R·Ulng Beach)
announced today that the National
Aeronautics and Space Administration
1NASAJ had authorized anQther $6.8
million for study of the space station,
with McDonnell Douglas Astronautics
Co.. Huntington Beach, and North
American Rockwell, Seal Beach, each
receiving $3.4 million. These companies
are making parallel competitive designs
of the space station. About 100 men
are working on the project in Huntington
Beach, a McDonnell Douglas spokesman
said.
The study. started in 1969 when NASA
granted $2.9 million to eacb company
for designs on the station.
That contract called for design of
a large manned space station that would
be launched intact. The new contract,
which would be sood for ten months,
ca lls for designs for a platform to be
laun.ched in r:nodules with the modules
to be assembled in orbit.
W onien V owrs
Hear Plan.s
For Huntington
"What'& Cooking for Hunt Jn gt on
Beach" is 1he,fltle of'-the next program
the League of Women Voters is offering
Huntington Beach residents.
The presentation, which will be given
;it 7:45 p.m. Thursday in the Community
Methodist Church, 6662 Heil Ave .. will
be on the plan ,kl create a specialty
shopping district downtown. . .
The city's beiichea and harbors direc-
tor. Vince Moorhouse, and Planning
Director Ken Reynolds will describe the
proposal and show slides and ii·
lus~rations.
City plapners have suggested that 1
two-block arl!!a from Walnut to Olive
avenuet from. Fifth to Third strttls
could be -oonvuted Into a mall. They
have been uiglng l;ttl!lin~ssmen and pro-
pttrty ownen ·to remodel the ,bWldJngs
lnto OOI! common . theme. sucfl aa · a
"Roarlng Twent.Cs Vollige," -
'J'.11! Thurldll)'.,nlJil\j ineetlng i• p1r\
o1 4 year.Jong stud)' by the-. l-WV on
"Land Use'' In Huntington Beach.. ·
Mrs. Corriell1 JohnsOO. 1iso anoounoed
that various unit.I of the LWV wJll ce>n·
duct studies on the t6f)i~ "Equalil1 .or
Opportunl~y in Emplorment" f r'o m
March 2.1 lo 2!-1 Infocinatjon, on I/I<
'meetlngjlact1 l""I', be obliioed 'by
taUlns •·IDeil.~ \•,
• '
ANKARA <UPI) -A TurkiSti govern-
ment spokesman -said today the gunmen
who kidnaped four U.S. airmen were
.,professional urban guerrlllas" subsidiz-
ed ·from abroad.
"ThJs is the work not of Ordinary
university students, but of a small group
of professloal urban guerrillas.'' the
•.;iokesman said. "They are subsidized
from outside Turkey and use the tactics
of South American guerrillas. Some of
the ringleaders have been trained by
outside groupe ." ·
The airmen -S. Sgt. Jimmie J.
Sexton of San Angelo, Tex .. and airmen
LC. Larry J. Heavner of Denver. Colo.,
James M. Gholson of Alexandria. Va.,
and Richard Caraszi of Stamford, Conn .
-were abducted at gunpoint Thursd.8y
and held for $400,000 ransom.
The kidnapers threatened to shoot the
captive unless the money was delivered
by 6 a.m. last Friday. The ransom
was not pa id and no word has been
heard from the kidnapers since the
deadline.
Troops with mine detectors returned
lo Ankara's Middle East Technical
University today to resume their search
of the grounds and six miles of un·
derground tunnels that honeycomb the
area carrying the campus heating
system.
Automatic weapons. revolvers. rifles.
large amounts of ammunition, gasoline
bombs, wireless equipment and uniforms
had already been found in the city,
the spokesman said. ·
"This is the biggest manhunt In
Turkey's history and one of lhe greatest
problems the gove1nmenL has ever fac-
ed," he said. "The hunt will lo on
until the men are found:'' • .IL
He said government olficials we.re op-
timistic the men were still alive.
"Although the kidnapers are militanL1,
if they are Turk! it is asainal the
grain to kill defenseless people.·•
He 1ald the poll~were following
several leads · and 20,000 1ecurlty ·men
were in action In Ankara alone.
Pollet still belleve kidnaped alfmen
may be -0n · the sprawling camp~ of
Middle East 1Technkal Univ.eislty. .
Two thoUWld of the unlver8lty'1 5,000
students have been questioned and 'l1
' '
Winds of Hurricane
' Smaah·Two to Death
' ULCINJ. Yugoslavia (AP) ~ Hur·
rlcane "wlnlb · picked up two WGrtmen
S11nd11y, "carried · them 70 (eet and then
smashed them down~ kllllr),i one on the
1poL •
Marinko Nea!Or,ovlc. 43, • lalfler of
five, had' hia ..he8d sma!hed against •
utility polt. Nim retahovlc, · 44, was
hOspltallztd with aerlout Injuries.
I
have been charged with offenses in·
volving the use of firearms in battles
with police and troops Friday. Two
persons died in the fighting.
Turkish authorities consider th e
university a breeding ground o f
radicalism.
Huntington Hero
Loses Mother
To Heart Attack
/ Less than lwo weeks aa:o. tt-year-old
David May was cited foe heroism by
the Huntington Beach Fire Department
He had saved his mother from death
by a heart attack.
Sunday. the Perry Elementary School
fifth grader returned home from a
weekend campout to find the house emp-
ty. Mrs. Margie Louise May had died
of a heart attack.
Police said the 49-year-old woman had
passed out while talking to a relative
in Bellflower. Breaking down the door
at 726 Owen Ave., they found that ~
had died around 9;30 a.m. Saturday.
Last Dec'ember, Mrs. May also ex-
hibited the symptoms of a heart attack.
but her alert son managed to phone
the fire department and summon the
rescue squad in time.
"He had been making soup and bot
broth for me and he knew I was getting
worse," Mrs. May said then. ''He handled
everything like a big man."
Ora•lfe Cean
We!I~
The fog will roll 1n along the
coast tonight, glvtn1 way to awmy
skies on ~y. wilh temper11·
tures ranging from 62 locally to
70 further Inland.
INSIDE TODAY
A. ftniliteT plant fsn't tht
proper ploce to him up 11our
nose whtn ' o//frtd a guided
tour, ot lc~t ·in Huntington
81ach. See 1torJ1, Poat J 4. ...... ~-.CatllWllll (lllCll.IMI Uf CIWlfltlll ·-Cm&~ -
O.ttl Httk .. ••lttrlat ,_ '"""""'-' •IMllC:•
tftrtK-Allll 1.t!MIWI
'
~ • ' ,,.,.
" " . " • " .....
" ..
~.
'
.• 1
; .. -~· '. ~· Fllonday, March 6, 1971
,i; -' • .
Mesa Drive·r 'Saves Family, Plunges to Death
Dangllng on a 350-foot canyon clif!,
a Costa Mesa m•n held bJs dune buggy
la pla<e while bb wile and daughter
CWDl>ored out Swlday, then plunged to
his dtt:th oo lhe rOckJ btlow.
Horrified friends ~·ho frantically helped
steady the little car watched as it plum-
nUted upside-down Into a dry creek bed,
•• crushing the victim beneath It.
Dead ls Richard B. Floyd, 35, of 2S8
E. 21st St., whose body was recovered
from the nmote, rugg~ terraln ln
Clevtland NaUOnal Forest aeveral hours
later.
Orange County Sberilf'• eearch and
rescue team members used ropes and
puJleya to haul the mangled body back
to the rugged trail.
Jnvestigators classed the tragic ac-
cident as a non-motor vehlcle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewis E. Stavenhager
said the accident occurred at 2 p.m.,
but deltU. wtre unavailable for .several
bofn due to lnac<easlblllty of the area.
lbree,;Jwrs alone were IJl(Dt ret'OVer-
lng Floyd'• corpoe.
Recounting the tale ol horror, Deputy
Marty Yingling said three families took
dune bugl!(les to the remote area, near
the intersection of Trabuco and El Carl.so
truck lralls.
Heavy Vote Turnout Seen
Freeway Issue to Draw Nearly 4 0% in Newport
By I. PETER KRIEG
Of 11M 0.llY 1"1111 Slltf
Newport Beach City Clerk Laura
Laglos today forecast "an eitremely
heavy turnout'' in Tuesday's Pacific
~· Cout F'retlllvay election.
CiUng the unusually large number of
absentee ballots, already numbering
more than 200, ft1rs. Lagios s a l d the
turnout could be "as high as 40 percent,"
or nearly 9,500 of Newport's 23,670 ellgt.
ble voters.
~ 'The city's 25 polling places will open
at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m. ~ ·. Mrs. Lagios asked voters to t a k e ~ special note of the' closing Ume, pointing
• out that it is one hour earlier than
county-administrated elections.
• \ Two propositions are on the ballot.
·-The first ls an initiative that if adopted,
would "ask" the City Council to rescind
a portion of an agreement with the
State Division of Highways dealing with
city street closings along the route <>(
the planned freeway east <>f Upper
Newport Bay through Corona del Mar.
Tite second is a Charter amendment
that. pending ratification by the stale
• ••• ' ~J
"
DAILY ,ILOT Sllll !'Mr.
Honored
Alan Dirkin, the DA IL Y
PILOT's west Orange County
editor, has been awarded the
1970 \Voodrow D. Cannon
llumanitarian Award for Press
Writing by the West Orange
County United Crusade. Direc·
tors of the seven-community
organization also cited the
DAILY PILOT !or its 1970 cov·
erage o! programs supported
by the crusade. Dirkin direct·
ed the coverage and wrote
many of the stories.
OIAMll COAST
DAILY PILOT
' 011.AHGI COAST PUIL1SHIHQ COMl"ANY'
loHrt H."W91i ,,..,, eNI ,~ .. lier
J 1clc R, C11rf1-( Vkt ..,... ... atld G-.1 Mfollflt(
'TlitMll K11YI(
l.dhOI",
Th•"''' A. M11r,1'i11• IMtltl.,.. lfllw
Af11 Dirk!•
w.J OBfWll Ciiunty ldllw
Allttrt w. 11111
AM«ltlO Edltot H_,..,...._.Offk•
J11 7i l11ch l11dtYlf4
M1lll111 Aidr1111 P.O. lo.: 7tO, t264t
"""""'"' Llf!iM ltldl: m ~••I A..,,.,..
C.NI MMI! 2)11 W•I lty Slrttt
M.....,. IMcfll :UU N_,.,,, 9ou:W.rl ~ '1-M: JIS Hor1fl IEI C.mlne lt•I
Tel ;I, .. 17141 &4l-4J21
Clo _W114 .U.ettldlt '41.167'
c...,Tfltif. 1tfL br_,. ONM hnfl~ ~. Ho MWI. ......... hhllh'll .... ....... _,,,., .... ~ .. -.. ...,. _, "' ~ ... ·""'*'' ~Ill ,.,.. MIMllfl 91 ~I .....
..... dlilll _,... ,.11 et N....,, hlctl.
.,.. c.t• ._ .. , Clllfionl(e. ~~ yrrW It.II _,..,,,, ..,. 111111 "·'' "'°""'"'' fl!llltt,., Mll!lllletlf, n.11 IMllWY·
'
legislature. would, lt adopled. require
city councils to conduct referendums
at any point in the future that they
want to adopt similar agreements on
the coastal , or any other, freeway.
The election was forced by the Citizens
Coordinating Committee <>f the Freeway
Fighters, which late last year met
Charter referendum requirements by fil·
ing petitions that were signed by more
than 15 percent of the registered voters.
CCC officials claimed that nearly 10,000
persons signed the petitions although
Mrs. Lagios verlfied onJy the minimum
number of names.
The two-month election campaign has
heated in recent days, to the point where
a fonner city officiaJ who tried to legally
stop the election has said he may sue
Vice M~or Howard Rogers for making
allegeal.y ilinderous remarks.
Fonner vice mayor Hans J. Lorenz,
who with two former mayors had unsuc·
cessfully appealed to both Superior Coll!(
and California Supreme Court to stop
the vote, said Thursday Rogers' attack
on him for that action "may justify"
a slander suit.
Rogers had referred to Lorenz and
former mayors Charles E. Hart ~d
James B. Stoddard as "snakes emerging
from an agricultural preserve" in a
talk at an election rally last Monday
night.
In the campaign for a "no'' vote,
the Freeway Fighters have maintained
that a massive negative count would
slop the state's plans to build the coastal
freeway through the city, or at least
along the , adopted route parallel to the
Pacific Coast Highway in West Newport
and south of Fashion Island and along
Fifth Avenue through C.orona del Mar.
The anti·freeway campaign has not
differentiated between the two segments
of the route, although the initiative to
rescind the agreement only deals with
the Corona del Mar segment.
Support for a "no" vote on both issues
has come formally from a five-member
majority o( the City Council, which sign-
ed the "yes" ballot arguments, and a
citizens CQmmittee headed by former
mayors Mrs. Doreen Marshall and Stod·
dard.
* * * * * * Newport Freeway Election
Shrouded by Legal Haze
A legal cloud will hang over the results
of Tuesday's freeway elecUon in Newport
Beach no matter which way the votes
go.
To help clarify the issues on the ballot,
however, the following will explain what
will happen barring any possible CilW't
action.
The first question, the lniUatlve to
rescind the agreement on street closing
along the route through Corona del Mar,
is not binding on the City Council.
If a majority votes "yes" on the
Issue, the City Council. probably fl.1arch
22. will meet to decide it it should,
ln fact, follow the dictates of the elec·
torate and cancel the contract.·
Although the Newport council , itself,
has supported a "no" vote, if a signifi·
cant majority votes to rescind the agree·
ment, it is expected to follow their
wishes.
The second question, the City Charter
Deckhand Seized
After Speargu1i
Robbery, Kidnap
A teenager who said he was Alaska·
bound, but got only as far as a Newport
Beach sportfishing dock was arrested
today in the kidnap-robbery or a waiter
abducted at speargun·point.
Investigators said the 16-year-old
suspect made the mistake of revealing
to his victim where he worked as a
deck.band.
Marlin L. Dart, of 2030lr!i Harbor
Boulevard, Costa Mesa, called police
after he was released unharmed at
Delaney's Sea Shanty restaurant, near
Davey's Locker.
Jnvestigators contacted the sportflshing
and excursion boat lirm, questioning
them about the possible suspect.
Tbe Long Beach youth was taken Into
custody and admitted to Orange County
J uvenile Hall, pending determination of
charges to be brought against him.
Dart told police he picked up the
boy while hitcb·hiklng at 3:30 a.m. and
was invited into his motel room at
1977 Newport Sl\td., Costa Mesa. "
amendment requ1r1ng referendums any
time in the future the council wants
to sign a similar street-elosing agree·
ment. must be sent to the California
Legislature for ratification if a majority
votes "yes."
There is, however. no guarantee the
legislature will ratify the amendment
because of the significance and con·
troversy surrounding the proposition.
'fhe legal and political implications
of both issues are far·reaching, and
if the measures are carried as an·
ticipatcd, City Attorney Tully Seymour
has forecast the state, as well as private
interests. may challenge their enactment
in the courts.
On the other hand, should the council
not act on the rescission should it pass
narrowly, the Freeway Fighters could
seek a court directive to force the action.
And if both measures fail, the Freeway
Fighters can a1so be eipected to persist,
perhaps along legal avenues, to gain
their major objettive -a new Pacific
Coast Freeway route through West
Newport.
Fifth Graders
To Tour Schools
Fifth grade children In the Huntington
Beach City School District will get one-
day tours <>f Dwyer and Gisler in·
termedlate schools this year in a new
orientation plan.
'fhe tours are part of a district effort
lo better prepare fifth graders for the
switch from ele entary school to In·
termediate school when they enter the
sixth grade.
ach student will lso be handed more
info lion to carr home to parent.s,
orientat1 the w le family to the
change in s
District trustees will review the new
<>rientalion plan when they meet at 8
p.m .. Tuesday, in the library of Dwyer
School.
Parenls complained I a s t year about
putting sixth graders with older children.
One of their points was that the new
students weren't properly familiarized
with the intermediate' schools. •
SA Fireman Saves Ape
In Lion Country Safari
A Santa Ana fireman who jumped Into
the sea lion pond at Lion Country Safari
Sunday to rescue a drowning baby gibbon
ape is credited with saying the
youngster's life.
Officials al tht Laguna llills animal
preserve said Raymond E. Kawalchuk,
31, was watching lhe antics or the sea
lions when he !polled t1i,e little ape ~ wbiefi ·appmntly had tunlblcd Into• ~
water while playing on an laland In
lhe etnttr of the pond.
Stripping off his shirt 11nd shoes
Kowalchuk climbed the fenct and plung·
td into the pond. which i! about four
feet deep, to pluck out the unconscious
victim.
I
lt 'vas Identified as a year-old 1imlang,
a breed of gibbon ape, about two feeL
tall and weighing 15 pounds.
While onlookers cheered. Kowalchuk
Mhed the little ape to the Uon Country
animal nursery where a team of vets
worked to revive it.
-The slmlang wu held for oburvatlon
In the nursery for a couple of hours,
then returned te its ·bland home, ap·
parently no the -worse for tu 1d·
venture.
The sea lions, according to Lion Coun-
try officials, appartntly ignortd Utt en·
tire drama. Apes never go Into water
voluntarily, they noted. and the baby
undoubtedly tumbled in by accident while
It was cavorlin& on the bank.
One veteran reJCUer branded the
weekend trek as terribly toollsh. due
· to hazardous conditions • n d tn-
a<Wlfbillty. • · I
Deputies said lbe group was .enjOying
the uhllaratlng off·slreet sport -riding
in tine -when Floyd's dune buggy,
in the lead , slithered up to the precipice
in a shower of sand and mud.
Scrambling to the family's aid, com·
pan1~ helped hold the buggy in place
while Mrs. Lillian Floyd and the couple's
small daughter stepped to salety.
Grim and ten111ed,-Floyd kept bb
feet planted firmlJ oo the brakes.
"But the second he took his feet 9ff
and tried lo esc.ope. the buggy feU,"
said one deputy. "lie didn't have a
chan<:i!."
His horrltled family watched the fatal
plunge, which was placed at about 10
miles northeast of the El Cariao Fire
18 Cars Bit
Station, off Ortega Highway.
One of the other dune buggies was
driven to the fire station which dispatch·
ed a lruck to the acene and radioed
sherlfl's deputies from the scene.
Floyd's companions were identHied 1s
service station owner Jim Tice, Hant
C. Madgin , both of Costa Mesa, and
Marine Rick A. Hughes, of 'I'we.ntynine
Palms.
Funeral services were pending t.oday.
Teenage Sniper
Shoots 4, Self
CAIL'( PILOT Stt lt l"llltt
'BOY OF THE YEAR'
Bo'(I Club's Fierro
Fierro Named
'Boy of Year'
l1i Huntington
George Fierro, a l7·year-0ld Huntington
Beach High School student, has :been
named "Boy of the Year" by the Hun·
Ungton Beach Boys Club.
The Oiler track athlete received the
honor for his service to the club.
~·He's one of the few boys who doesn't
ask, 'How much do I get?' when we
ask him to do something," said Boys
Club ExecutiYe Director Pat Downey.
"'George practically lives at the Boys
Club and Is extremely helpful with the
younger kids. He's even agreed to be
our janitor."
Other boys cited by the club include
Marc Beijer. 10, game room boy of
the year: Gene Maurer, 10, camper
<>f the year; David \Vitt, 8, sportsman
of the year; Barry \Vatts, 8, citizen
of the year ; and Kent Martin, 8, most
spirited boy of the year.
Also singled out for awards were
Armando Reyes. 15, most improved boy
of the year; Terry Jackson, 12, of
the year, and Robert Butler, 16, judo
player of the year.
Alex Valdez. a 17·yea r old blind youth
from Garden Grove, received the club's
special award as blind judo player of
lhe year. Alex is a member of the
blind judo class taught by Downey. It
is the only class of its type in the
U.S.
New officers of the club are Bi 11
Peterson, president of the board of direc·
tors; James Lange, secretary; Miss
Molly Tolson, treasurer. and Dr. Willred
Cohen, vice-president of the board.
Singe1· Kills Self;
Wife, Baby Stabbed
LOS ANGELES {UPI) -Bruce Cloud,
31. a former singer with the Dominoes,
:i1tabbed his wife and 2-year-old son to
death and then took his own life, police
said Sunday.
Cloud's body was found in his auto
In a park. Police said he apparently
was not able to kill himself with the
knife and ran a hose from the car's
exhaust pipe into the interior to pump
in carbon monoxide gas.
GREENWATER, Wash. (UPI) -A
16-year-old boy who had "never been
in any trouble" was found lying face
down in the snow, killed by one of
two rifles he had used Sunday to riddle
passing automobiles.
"I can't see any reason for it," said
William H. Egnew Sr., the father of
the sniper and an iruipectcr for the
Seattle Fire Department "He w1s too
good humored .•. too stable."
William Herbert Egnew Jr. perched
in a •·foxhole.type" crevice atop a 100-
fool cliff and began spraying .22 caliber
rifle bu1lels at passing aulotoobiles on
U.S. 410. At least 18 vehicles were hit,
including an ambulance which had come
lo take away one of the four persons
v.·ounded.
The unsuspecting targets of the bar·
rage said after they never heard a
word from the youth, who only returned
their shouted pleas to stop shooting with
more bullets.
"We were riding along just talking
about things, teenagers, drugs, things
like that," said Mrs. Mary C. Pluewnarz,
31, of Buckley, one of the victims.
Valley Medical
Center Expands;
Ne'v Plans Told
Plans for Fountain Valley 's medical
center are expanding.
A 114--bed hospital Is now under con-
struction. Wednesday nia:ht, the city
Planning Commission will look at plans
for three medical buildings next tp it.
City officials expect Fountain Valley
Community Hospital to open in Sep-
tember. Jt 's a single·story building on
five acres, with the first phase ac·
commodaling 114·beds and expansion
plans for another 128-bed unit.
The same doctors -Fountain Valley
Medical Development -who are building
the hospital also plan to construct a
three-story medical tower on 3.7 acres
north of the hosplfal.
All of the medical buildings are near
the southeast comer of Warner Avenue
and Euclid Street.
The three-story tower includes 38,400
square feet of spaa for medical offices
and 1,600 square feet for a pharmacy.
JI is also planned for future expansion.
Dr. Maxwell Roston also has submitted
plans for a two-building, one·slory
medical complex south of the hospital.
His unit has room for 44 medical offices
of 1,000 square feet each. It v.·UJ be
on five acres of land.
The planning commission meets at
7:30 p.n1. Wednesday in city council
chamber11, Planners will look at precise
plans for the proposed medical offices
and a public hearing will be held on
each.
CASH
LOANS1
"OLDEST AND EASIEST
WAY TO BORROW''
"Then I heard something hit the win·
dow. • .and I saw a little hole in
the glass. I felt something on my arm,
like a blow. I remember thinking that
a rock hit the window. I put my hand
on my sleeve and there was blood."
Mrs. Pluewnarz, like the others •ho
·were shot, was not seriously wounded.
The bullet was removed at a hospital
in Encumclaw, about 14 miles west of
here.
"At first, I thought my engine blew
up," said Jaques M. Lescan, 24, a ski
instructor wounded in the foot by a
bullet which pierced a vent window.
The other two wounded by bullets
were Eugene H. Terrien <>r Steilacoom
and his son, Douglas, 12 who were on
their way to a skiing holiday.
Two other persons were cut by flying
glass from shattered windshields.
··when they (the victims) came around
a curve to one side of him," said Capt.
Fred Pingry of the King County Sheriff's
Department, ''he was looking right down
at their cars."
Two deputy sheriffs and a stale trooper
worked their way up a logging road
behind the youth and approached him
from the rear. "
When they could not gain young
Egnew·s attention, "They threw a
snowball down at him , but there was
no movement," Pingry said. "They in·
ched up and found him dead."
They found 51 shell casings tn the
snow around the body. One of the rifles
was equipped with a telescopic sight.
"From what we can gather, he'd never
been in any trouble," said a police
officer.
Shoe Clerks Foil
Robbery Plan;
3 Under Arrest
Employes al a Huntington Center shoe
store foiled a robbery plan over the
weekend by turning in three persons
who had allegedly tried to set up a
robbery.
In custody at Huntington Beach City
Jail today on conspiracy to ·solicit rob-
bery charges are David Cornett, 25,
of :orrance: Eugene Bruce, 2 3,
transient: and f\.1ary S, Tollison, 23, of
16853 Nichols St., Huntington Beach.
Kinney Shoes workers said the trio
tried to talk them into "playing dumb"
during a robbery they allegedly planned
for later Saturday.
Instead, detectives from the police
department's Special Enforcement Detail
were summoned. 'fhey arrested Bruce
and the Tollison woman at her home
after one of the men allegedly walked
out with shoes and other merchandise.
Cornett was taken into custody later
that day when he returned to the store
to call off the robbery, detectives said.
Borrow from $5 to $I 00, •n~
more, INSTANTLY. No red
tape, no credit checks. All you
need is an item for colloterol.
NO EXLANATION NECESSARY. --ALL LOANS CONFIDENTIAL:. •
• Fast •.Friend~ • Convenient
-• Come In and Sff wliat W•
offer our customers. A new
and unusual experlenc• In
in s h o p p i n CJ •njoyment.
Whera people in the know
save money eyery time they
buy.
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU JO SELECT FIOM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
. ~OSTA -MESALJEWElRY-·and L-OAN
LOAN, IUY, SIU, TIADI
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -Be-Harbor A Broodway
' I
' .
7 I
·~ -.--~· ......... -. r --... ' ..
Ne rt Beaeh Today's Flbal
N.Y. Stoeke
VOL 64, NO. 57, l SECTIONS, 32 ·PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH a, 1971 TEN CENTS
Heavy Route Vote Seen
40% Turnout Predicted in Freeway Balloting
. DAILY 'IL01' lllft L'MI•
Two ll' ays to fly
On waters of Newport Harbor, all boats ·seem to be going that-a-way
while in the air above, the Newport Beac~ police helicopter travels
counterwise, Maybe it all depends on which way the winds are
a-blowin'.
l(idnapers of 4 Airmen
Said 'Pro 'Guerrilliis"
ANKARA (UPI) - A Turkish govern-
ment SIX>kesman said today tbe gunmen
who kidnaped four U.S. airmen were
"proressional urban guerrillas" subsidiz-
ed from abroad.
"This is the work nol of ordinary
university students. but of a small group
of professioa\ urban guerrillas." the
s;:-okcsman said. "They are subsidized
from outside Turkey and use the tactics
of South American guerrillas. Some of
the ringleaders have been trained by
outside groups .''
The airmen -S. Sgt. Jimmie J.
Sexton of San Angelo, Tex .. and airmen
l.C. Larry J . Heavner of Denver, Colo .•
James M. Gholson of Alexandria, Va .,
and Richard Car.aszi of Stamford. Conn.
-were abducted at gunpoint Thursday
and held for $400,000 ransom.
'Specific War'
Objection Nixed
By High Court
WASHINGTON {UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused today to allow draftees
to claim conscientious objector statWI
because of opposilioo to a specific war
such as Vietnam. The vote was 8 to
I with justice William O. Douglas dissen·
ting. Jn lhe majority opinion in two test
cases, Justice Thurgood Marsh a 11
declared that Congress In enacting the
Selective Service Law intended to exempt
only persons "who oppose participation
In all wars -participation tn war in
any form."
The lridnapers threatened to shoot the
captive unless the mol'ley was delivered
by 6 a.m. last Friday. The ransom
was oot paid and no word has been
heard from the kidnapers since the
deadline.
Troops with mine detectors returned
to Ankara 's Middle E.a st Technical
University today to resUme their search
()f 1he grounds and six miles of un-
derground lunnels ~t hone.ycomb the
area carrying the campus heating
system.
Automatic· weapons, revolvet"a. rifles,
large amouots of amrrwJiition. gasoline
bombl, wireJess equipmeµt and uniforms
had already been fOl:1Jld , in the city,
the spokesman said .. ·
"This is the biggest manhunt in
Turke y's history and one of the greatest
problems the government has evt!r fac-
ed." he said. "The hunt will go on
until the me11 are found .. " ' •
Hl: said government officials were op-
timistic the men were still alive.
"Although tht kidnapers" are militants .
U' they are 'l'urk!I it is against the
grain to kill defenseless people.''
He said the police were following
several leads and 20.000 security men
were in action in Ankara alone.
Police 1till believe ltidnaped airmen
may be on the sprawling campu,, of
Middle East Technical University.
Two thousand of the un iversity's S,000
students have been questioned and 'l1
bave be.en charged wlQi offenses in-
volving the use of firearnu in battles
with police and troops Friday. Two
persons ditd in the fighting .
Turkish authorities consider
university a br~ng ground
radicall!m.
the
of
By L. PETER KRJEG
ot ""' Delly 1"1191 ll•tf
Newport Beach City Clerk Laura
Lagios today forecast "an extremely
heavy turnout'' in Tuesday's Pacific
Coast Free.way election.
Citing the unusually large number of
absentee ballots, already· nUmbt!-rini
more than 200, P.ir11. Lagios 11 a i d the
turnout could be "as high as 40 percent,"
or nearly 9,500 of Newport's 23,670 eligi-
ble voters.
The city's 25 polling places will open
at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m.
P.lrs. Lagios asked voters .to t a k e
special note of the closing time. pointing
out that it is one hour earlier than
county-administrated elections.
Two propositions are on the ballot.
The. firs.t i!...anJnitilfue that if adopted,
would "ask" the City Council to rescind
* * * State to Eye
a portion of an agreement with the
State Division or Highways dealing with
city street closings along the route of
lhe planned freeway east of Upper
Nel,fport Bay through Corona del Ma~.
The second is a Charter amendment
that., pending ratification by the , state
legislature. would, if · adoptei::I, require
city councils to conduct referendums
at any point in the future that they
want to adopt similar agreement! on
the coastal, or any other. freeway.
The election was forced by the Citizens
Coordinating Committee of the Freeway
Fighters, which late last year met
Charter referendum requirements by fil-
ing petitions that werl! signed by more
than 15 percent of the registertd voters.
CCC officials claimed that nearly 10,000
~rsons signed the _petitiollL although
Mrs. Lagios veriUed' only the minimum
* Mayor Explains
number of names.
The two-month elect.ion campaign ha!I
heated In recent days, to the Point where
a former city official who tried to legally
stop the election has-stti,d he may 1ue..
Viet Mayor Howard Roger! for making
allegedly shmdl!rous remarks.
Fonner vict mayor Hans" J. Lorenz,
who with two former mayora had unsuc-
cessfully appealed to both Superior Court
and California Supreme Court to.,stop
the vote. said Thursday Rogers' atlack
on him for that action "may justify''
a slander suit.
Rogers had referred to Lorenz and
former mayors Charles E. H a r t and
James 8. Stoddard as "snakes emerging
from an agricultural preserve'' in ·a
talk al an election rally la11t Monday
night.
In the campaign fOr ;: "no.... vote,
Traffic Study
Modifications
Five Councilmen
The California Highway Commission
will review the results of the pending
Newport Beach traffic 5tudy should the
11tudy show that a modification in the
Urge 'No~ Vote
Newpart Beach Ma yor Ed Hirth said route of the Pacific CQast Freeway is today the differences in Tue.sday·s
desirable. Pacific Coast Freeway election "are not
Fred C. Jennings, chairman of the in our city's goals -merely in methO<b
Highway Commission. said .this morning to accomplish them."
he has polled the entire board and they Mayor Hirth and four other members
•·unanimously" agreet!. l9 such a review . of the city council have c.aUed for a
JeMings had . to}51· M'yor Ed ,Hirth :_°i" vote IP the ballotina. ur&in& lns~ad Feb. 1e· he, persona'!l)i "'luta oupport~ ,.,,....,.~~.,...,..,.'W"llft-in··
1 review, but a Freeway Fighters the handl•of the. council. _
11pokesman immediately pointed oul that Freewa). Fighters spokesmen have
Jenning!' 11support" would not guarantee palgntd for • "yes" vote, malntll·
It would take place. nlng ''it is time for radical mea!!ures"
The traffic study, for wh ich the city to "save our city fri:im the freeway."
council tonight may select a consulting In his statement this morning. the
firm to perform. is intended to find mayor outlined his personal thinking on
sol utions to the city'11 traffic problems. the issues:
and, in effect. tell Newport Beach if "None of us want to see a monstrous
Newport Beach needs a freewa y, and freeway cutting through our community.
""'here that freeway should go.. We all realize our g~wing traffic pro-
Vin Jorgensen. a key figure in the blems must be solved.
Freeway Fighters was the one whO, "If you fe~I that just telling the state
in effect, called Jennings' promise we have dec1.ded to cancel our freeway
worthless in a talk to the Newport Harbor agreem ent will solve our problem, then
Chamber of Commerce Feb. 28. vote 'yes' on the initiative measure.
"Jennings is only ·one or seven com-U you believe a more constructive ap.
missioners ," Jorgensen said. proa~h would be to devile acceptable
Jennings said this morning he polled solutions through comprehensive study
the entire commission, read them his
to propose as alternatives, vote 'no•
on the first item.
"None of us are satisfied with the
council's or the 1tate's accomplishments
in solving our freeway problems. U you
feel it will aid in solving our traffic
problems to change. QUr City Charter
by tak!N! oo.wer of ~ol~on .JrOQ1~ 'c0€ftdt.~1Mft"1 vote ~~ rttJefi~.
proposition. If you feeJ the better way
ia to allow the coupcil to retain the P,,wtt n.....,ary to . fuJIW. I t I
respoMibilitles and repreient you ill de11l-
inp with the state, vote 'no' on the
second item.
"The differences are not iJ1 ·our city's
goals -merely in me.thods to accori1Plish
lhem. Thus there is no real occasion
for 11uch controversy or strong feelings.
The council must continue to work on
the solution of our traffic problems arter _
the election on whatever basis is
established. It is hoped the community
will unite in support of the council's
efforts.
"Vote, then amile at the fellow with
a different opinion and let us work
together to solve our problem."
Jetter to the mayor, and "all concurred.''
The letter said:
"It is my understanding that the City
of Newport Beach has undP,.!aken a
comprehensive traffic study in connection
\\'ilh the Coastal Freeway controversy.
Mesan Rescues Family,
"I am interested in helping to find
a solution to the problem. and if the
report as submitted by your consultants
Indicates the desirability of some
modification in the adopted route. I will
'suppo rt a review of this study by the
Division of Highways to establish any
area of concurrence."
The adopted coastal freeway route
follows the Pacific Coast Highway
through West Newport, and this is the
most controversial segment of the route.
The city has C<lntinually expressed op-
position to this portion, and has not
signed a street-clMing agreement with
the state for that reason.
The easterly segment, from Bayside
Drive. be.low Newport Center, along Fifth
Avenue and exiting through Buck Gully,
received the city's formal stamp of ap-
pro9al In 1968. It is this approval that
(See TRAFFIC, Page II
Dies in Cliff Plunge
Dangling on a 350-foot canyon cliff,
a Costa Mesa man held his dune buggy
in place while his wife and daughter
clambered out Sunday, then plunged to
his death on Lhe rocks below.
Horrified friends who frantically helped
steady the little car watched as It plum-
mited upside-down into a dry creek bed,
crushing the victim beneath It.
Dead Is Richard B. Floyd, 35. of 258
E. 21st St., whose body was recovered
from the remote, rugged terrain in
Cleveland National Forest several hours
later.
Orange County Sheriff's search and
rescue team members used ropes and
pulleys to haul the inangled body back
to the rugged Ital!.
Investigators classed the tragic ac-
cident a~ a non-motor vehicle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewis E. Stavenbager
said the accident occurred at 2 p.m.,
but details were unavailable for several
hours due to inaccessibility of the area.
Three hours alone were spent recover-
ing Floyd's corpse.
Recounting the tale of horror, Deputy
Marty Yingling "Said three families took
duM buggies to the remote area, ~r
the lnter&ection of Trabuco and El Carlso
truck traits.
Of the argument that a draftee shouJd
be able to ali1gle-dat-a pafticular ~war
as ground! for consclenUous objecUont
Marlhall wrote :
"Persons who object solely to
participation ln a pa"'!cular war ~re
not witbill)he purview ~f the exempting
section even though the Jatte'r objection
may have such roots ir. a claimant's
conscience and personallty that It is
religious In character."
Expense· Cuts Re Ve i1led · . .
One veteran rescuer branded the
weekend trek as terribly foolish, due
to hazanklua • condition• a n d in-aCCeulbility. ·
Deputies said the group was enjoyln(I'.
the exhilarating off-street. sport r-ridfng
in line -when Floyd's duiie buggy,
in the lead, allthered up 1o the precipice
in a shower' Of 11and and mud,
·Scrambling to, the famlly's aid, com·
panlo111 helped hold the buggy in place
while Mrs. Lillian Floyd and the couple's
small daughter stepped to safety. In his di"ssent. Douglas said of the
majority rUling : "Conscience I•
repudiated · . . . the' court has done.
violence to ·the basic philosophy of the
rirst amendment and we take a step
backward ." 1
The decisions upheld )ower court nd-
lngs against twtl men who r'fustd to
serve in Vietnam.
Guy Porter Gillette o( New York City
was sentenced to two years in ptlson
for refusing to report for induction. Louis
A. Negre of Bakersfield, Calif .. sought
to geroot of the serYJce--after ht.::Pad
ht!-en draft•·• -•
Marshall said that the court was not
suggesting that Congress could not have
decided to exempt those who object
to a patticul1r war but w111 detmnlning
there was a "neutral. secular justUlca·
lion " for the h1w u wrltlen.
I
New port Manager Outlines New Budget Guidelines
Proposed 1971·72 budget guidelines
prepared by 1 11pecial city council. com·
mittee ire unworkable, and those dealing:
.with employe!' salaries may be ·nttgal,
Newporl Buch City Manager Harvey
L, Jfurlburt said today.
Given "Untll tonight to respond to the
suggested guJdellnes, Hurlburt lhls morn-
ing released reoommendatlons he said
will be!t get the city through 11n austere
fiscal year.
"ff the pUbl and fh< council want
<:Uls." Hurlburt' aa'd, "Let'1 do it and
do It ~lfigtbtJY, not just defer exptnses
or transfer them to hidden areas."
Hurlburt'• propo..~ cuta:, which he
11ald "will allow the ci ly to continue
to provide the b11ic crltJca.1 aervkes,"
Include:
-closing the S.lboa Island fire station
(see separate story).
-Eliminating the city 's $87.000 con·
tributlon to the Hirlior Olympic Pool
Fund.
-Dristicilly fedu'Clng-beach cleaning
efforts.
-Reducing open hours for libraries.
-Eliminating lifeguards at the bay
stations. •
• -Eliminating the boys' baseball p(~
gram .
-Discontinuing the police community 1
relations and "policeman oo campus"
~rogram1. _
-Reducing police p11trol tlm!"'through
reduction In personntl and police
vehicles.
-Cutting library book 'purchases in
half.
Hurlburt'1 list alao calls for soine
reduction ln per5<lnnel In v a r I o u I
..
departments that would be unDeeded'
since the level of services rendered would
be reduced.
He did not put a doUar figure on
his proposal!.
In his report, be has asked the council
lo tell him if their declaration that "the
pn!sent 1evtl of services" Is adequate
and be maintained means ''maintaining
the exact 11ame '1ervlces" or "an
equiva&ent level of serv.ices" in keeping
with pi)pO!atlon groWth. ,
One of I.hi: most controversial rte0m-
mendS:liDn11 In the proposed guidelines
dealt with,.1alary increas;.~1 that
there be oone exceptjor .whose
pay falls lno,.. lh;in five per ~t lielow
comparative salaries for tirnUar tune· uom. · '
Hurlburt said this "seems to have
is.. euooi;r, Pap 11
'
Grim and terriried, Floyd kept his
feet planted firmly on the brakes.
"But the """""d h< took his feet off
and tried to escape, the _bu,gy fell,"
said one deputy. "He didn't have a
cha~."
Hil horrified family watched the fatal
phDlge, which was pla({td 11~ about 10
miles northeast or the El CirilO Fir.
Station, cilj Ortega Highway. • •
One of the other dune buglt1 WIS
driven to'Uie lire it.at;on whlcb disp.f.ch--
ed a tru'ck to the scene and radioed
sheriff'•· deputies from the scene.
Floyd'• companion• l\r.iere identified . as
ge.rvlce station owner Jim Tice, H¥k c. Madgln. both of Costa Mesa, and
Marine Rick A. Hughes. of Twentynine
Palms. · '
Funeral servlct1 were pendln1 today.
the Freeway Fighters have malnt.alned
that a massive negative count would
11top the state's plans to build the coastal
freeway through the city, Or at least
along the adopted route parallel to the
Pacific Coast Highway in West Newport
and aouth of Fashion Island anet along
Fift.h Avenue Qirougb Corona de! Mar.
' The anti.freeway campaign has not
differentiated between the two ugments
of the route, although tbe initiative to
rescind the agreement only deals with
the Corona del Mar se;:ment.
Support for a "no" vote on OOtb issues
has come formally from a five-member
majorlly of the City Ccuncil, which sign-
ed the. "yes" ballot argument&, and a
citizens committee headed by former
mayors Mrs. Doreeo Marshall and Stod·
dara. ·
* * * Freeway Vote
Still Clouded
By Legalities
A legal cloud will hang over the results
of Tuesday's freeway election in Newport'
~ach no matter whicb way the votes
go.
to help clarify the issues on the ballot.
t)owever, the following will explaift· what
will tiappen barring any possible court
action. 1
The first question. the initiative to
rescind the 1greement. on street closing
along the route lhrough Corona del Mar.
ii not blndin~ ·on the City Council. · ·
-1f a majority votes "yea" on the
Issue, the City Council, probably March
22, will meet to deci4e il U should,
ln fac:t.. follow the dictates o( ihe elec-
torate and cancel the contract.
Although lhe Newport council, Itself.
has: supported a "no" vote, if a signifi-
cant majority votes to rescind the agree-
nrent, It is expected to follow their
wishes .
The second question. the City Charter
amendment requiring referendums any
time in the future th"e council wants
to slgn a similar street-closing agree-
ment, must be sent to the Califtltnia
Legislature for ratification if a maj•ily
votes "yes."
There i11, however, no guarantee the
legislature will ratify the amendment
because of the algnlflcance and con-
troversy &WTounding the proposition.
The legal and Political implications
of both issues are far-reaching, and
if the ·measures •are carried as an·
ticipated. Cily Attorney Tully Seymour
has forecast the state. as well a11 private
interests, may challenge their enactment
in the courts.
On I.he other hand, should the council
not act on the rescissiOn should it pass
narrowly. the Freeway Fighters could
seek a court directive tQ (orce the action.
And If both measures fail, the Freeway
Fighters can also be expected to persist,
perhaps along legal avenue1. to gain
their major objective -a new Pacific
Coast Freeway route through West
Newport.
Jumbo Sets Record
LONDON (UPI) -A Pan American
747 jumOO jet new the 5,552 mUes from
London to Los Angeles in nine hou rs
38 minutes Sunday, cutting 12 minutet
off the previous record for the flight,
an airline spoResmaii uld"today. -· Orange
'1'eather
The fog will roll in along the
coast tonight, Jiving way to sunny
skies on Tuesday, with tempera·
tures ranging from 62 loc11lly to
70 further inland.
IN!UllE TQDA Y
A fertlUztT plant isn't the
pr6pcr plocf to turn up uou,.
nose when offered 11 guided
tour, at tetl!t in HunCinQt01'
Btacri,. See atoru, PaQe t4. ' . . ~ M MWlin • ..
I NttlMll NM ..
r °''"" c-tT ti 11..)1 .,WI. ~ 1'
1• s.-ns 1>21 ti ... ~IM~ •1l
It TllWI• It
& Tiltlttn It
It WNftw I
ff.ti .._ .... """' 1•1r " ..... .... .. "
• J I
. -
z OAll Y PILOT N
; Pro-tests Seen
Bal Isle Station
I
Youth, 16, 1
Held · by FBI
In Hijack Closing Sought
Newport Beach Fire Chief R. J, Br is-
-coe tod1Y recommended the Balboa Is-
• land fire 11tatlon cloetd whel'\ the Newport
Centtr &latl on is ope ned about July 1.
The recommendaUon , expected to stir
heated opposition from :sland residents,
wu concurred wltb thia morning by City
Manager Harvey L. Hurlburt.
Hurlburt, in a report on cru;t-cu ts en-
visioned in the 1571-n fiscal year pre-
pared for today's meeling of the city
council. sa1d Briscoe has told him that
once the new 11taUon is open "there ii
no justifi cation 1n malntainJng the Balboa
Island stalion."
• The station, loca ted at 3%3 Marine Ave.,
· was built ln 1931 ind at the time was tbe
f'roM Page 1
~BUDGET ••• .
, aome legal ramlflcaUons" and cited a
{ atatement by lawyers representlng: the
• various city employe associations and
by City Attorney Tully Seymour.
•: Both Seymour and employe attorneys
1·5ay tbe stipulaUon does not comply with
"1'.ate law pertaining to "good faith"
~~bargalning practices.
I • Hurlburt aald Seymour point! out "that
·• under the Meyer·Mlllas-Brown Act and
~-own -Employtr-Employff Relations
rtaolution we have a legal duty to submit
these for 'meet and confer in good
•
• faith.' "
Hurlburt'a rtport also defends tbe basic
· financial position of the city saying
• Newport "la one of the ht:althlest fin1n·
• cial communities in Southern Calilorn!a
and probably the entire state."
• He said the recent spending cutbacks,
• .amounU121 to nearly $400,000, "were
.minor compared to steps wbich had
to be taken in many surrounding cities. ·
"Many clUes have exhausted their
revenue sources and this is far from
the case in Newport Beach," he said.
"Anyone wbo tries to paint Newport
Beach as he:Og In financial trouble Is
either Ja:norant of the fact.s, or Is in-
tentionafly trying to mislead and confuse
the public in their own self·serving in· terest," he aald.
"Dur only financial problem hu been
• IUdden uaantlclp1ted decline In
'revenues this year, the same as has
been uperif:nced by the federal govern-
• meet. tbe state 1overnment and all
-munlclpalllie1.
"Our only problem· hu been news
RDSation&li.sm and local political op-
portunJsla," be char1ed.
• Hurlburt added, however, that "none
.ff Uie · fort1olng 1hould be interpreted
as Jack of reco1nlllon that the public
.is in financial trouble and needs relief.
. "'Ibey are overtaxed, i1be CO!t of llvlng
Js rLstn&: beyond all reason and the
biJh unemployment rv ls very critical.
"The public is dt'!iandlng flnanclal
relief llld il this city can help It should
do everytblne wtthln Its power by reduc-
ing or ellmlnat1n1 non-crltlcal services
"and expenditures unUI the national
ttoqomy Jmproves ," he said.
. Hfzrlburt also dealt with speelfic
'.ncMnmendatlons tn the p r op o s e d
-guidelines, one of which calls for a
blring f:ret.ze.
He aald if vacancies that occur In
many areas are not filled, the ope.ration
_of specUlc departmentJ ml&ht be crip-
pled.
He cited a 2• percent turnover in
tbe police department list year a1 an
ei.:ample. Hurlburt also criticized sec·
Uon1 th1t deal with administrative
reaponslblllties, aayine they would. ln
effect, "tie my hands lo tbe tbe point
where I cannot assemble a budaet
represenllng mas:lmum efficiency and
mulmum response to public needs. 0
I
OU.Ntl COAST
DAILY PILOT
dltANGI COAST ,UILl$HING COM,AICY '
ReD-rt N. We•tJ '••lder!t .,.. '""'lthtr J••' a. c•..r.., Yke' '"''""" .,,. 0--1 M.,.....
n. ... , "'''''r .. ,,..
"l'tie"''' Ji.. Mvr1tlli11e Mtlltf..., c~n..,
l. Ptt.f 1t:r1.,
N""""1 hedl Cllr M llw
.......... OMN>
3)1) Ntwport le11lt .. ef11
M't!ft"t Ailltlre11: P.O. It• 1171, 92661
°""'°"'"' °"" Mn•: • wn1 ••r ,,,... Ltt~ .. ~I ti: ,._.,, A-ue
ftUllllllO"" '-I'll 1"1$ ..... ..., ..... ,., -S.11 Cl9Mnlt; JN llwth 11 .CflYllno ll:UI
city's second firebouse.
ln addi tion to the island . It serves Bea-
con Say, Irvine Terrace, Harbor Island,
Linda Isle. the Newport Du nes trailer
park and, at times , goes as far no rth as
Eastbluff, according to Chief Bflscoe.
Hurlburt this morning noted that clos-
ing the station will affect the protection
of homes, u peclally on I.he island, ··be·
cause of response time."
He said, however, thal the rccommen.
dalion is made on the !:Iasis of cost sav·
ings "weighed against protection."
Hurlburt said Chief Briscoe js currently
preparing a detailed statistical analysis
to support his recommendatlon .
In his report to the city council. Hur!-
l)urt said closing the station will save
the city $113,000 a year in operatinf cMts,
including the sala ries of nine men. and
wlll make It possible to avo id buying a
new fire engine for the Newport Center
facility .
The city would al so realize additional
monies from both the sale of the prop-
erty and the taxes it produces once it
goes back on the assessor's roles, Hurl-
burt pointed out.
Nursery Fire
Extinguished
In Costa Mesct
A fire so intense its origin cannot
be determined leveled former Costa
Mesa city counc il man Calvin Barck's
nursery Sunday night, causing $1<1,()()(l
damqe.
He was granted a council permit a
week ago to close down his Orange
Coast Nursery, 380 W. Wilson St., as
required by mu nicipal ordinance.
Heat genera ted by the 10 p.111. blaze
"'as so intense it bli stered paint on
buildings 40 fee t awa y.
Batlalion Chief Ed Lewis said this
is not uncommon in cases whe re a
blaze is well under v.·ay before firemen
can begin to exUnguish it.
Location of the outbreak was in a
workshop area and names quickly raced
to a nearby storage section, Lewis said,
adding the cause is impos1ible to
determine .
•·Jt was-a very, very, hot, fast fire .''
be said.
"No indication could be found on the
cause. There's not'hing left but ashes."
be added.
Chief Lewis said the fi re destroyed
a metal building housing stored nursery
supplies including wheelbarro ws and
aswrted fertilizers.
He said the latter compounds can
bum with intense beat, but were not
,. a primary factor in this particular blaze.
Firemen had hardly gotten back to
headquarters from an earlier residential
blaze wben the Orange Coast Nurse ry
call came in.
Mny Rise High i1a Newport
Developers of the 120·foot Lido Apartments, plan-
ned on Lafayette Avenue adjacent to Vista Del
Lido (background. left) may be allowed to return to
work Tuesday. Newport Beach City Council tonight
u•ll l be asked to reinstate the building perntit !or
the project tha t was lifted two weeks ago on an
emergency ordinance banning all high rise con·
struction for 90 days.
Governor Called 'Highest
Paid Welfare Recipient'
SACRM.1ENTO (UPI) -Gov. Ronald against the governor's "reform" plan on
Reagan v.·as called •·the highest paid 1he Capitol steps.
welfare recipient in the state·· today by '_'The gove rnor .~msel~ is the highest
the National Chairman or the Welfare .... pa1~ w~lfare . reci pient in the state of . . Califonua. Ji.is chec k comes ·from-the Rights Organ1iallon, who led a protest same place as mine -the taxpayers,"
Johnnie Till mon or Los Angeles told a
From Page 1
TRAFFIC •••
the Freeway Fighters are seeking to
ha ve rescinded in the initiative election
Tuesday.
A second measure on the ballot is
a charter amendment that would require
the council to put fut ure agreements
to a cHy-\\'ide vote before they could
be signed.
A flve-member majority of the council
has urged a ··no" vote on both questions
signing their names to the fo rmal ballot
argwnents.
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers joined four
other Freeway Fighters in signing the
"yes" arguments on both questons.
7 LA Policemen Hurt
By Barrage of Rocks
LOS ANGELES IUPI) -The Griffith
Park merry-go-round was the scene of
violenct Sunday when seven police of·
ficers were hit by a rock and boUle
barrage.
The officers v.•ere writing citaUons for
Illegal parking when about 100 persons
de.scribed as hippie types began the
barrage. Officers from five police divi-
:;;ions were called in to help disperse the
crowd of about 2,000 which gathered.
group o{ about 75."
''I didn't hea r him say anythin2 about
cutting his check," she added.
Reagan, whose salary is $49,100, last
v.·eek proposed a broad welfar e and ~1ed·
i-Cat "reform" proposal designed to save
taxpayers $575 miUion in federal state
and county funds. It would requ ire able·
bodied recipients to seek work and tight·
en welfare eligibility standards.
The organization's state chairman,
Catherine Jermany of Los Angeles held
up a framed cerlifiCa!e which designated
Reagan as "honorary mem bership chair·
ma n" or lhe group and "gratefully
thanks hlm for doing more than any
other individual to Increase membership
in the California Welfare Rights org11n ir:·
ation."
The group said it would propose. its
own "reform'' legislatioo.
"Only appro1imately 15 percent of lhe
total welfare population are ab le to
work," the organization said in a pre·
pared statement. "Able·bodied welfare
rttiplenta: want to work . Where art the
jobs and the trainina and the comm unity
service projects?''
A key part of Reagan's program would
put reclplents to work oo public service
projects.
Harriet Brewer
Services Slated
Funeral services will be held Tuesday
at 3:30 p.m. in Waverly Church in Santa
Ana for Newport Beach int er i o r
decoralor Harriet Brewer wbo died
Saturday after a lenathy illness. She
\\'BS 47.
Miss Brewer was a na tive of Fullerton
and attended Oranae High School and
Santa Ana Jun ior Colleae before settling
in Newport Beach 20 years ago. She
was a self-employed interior decorator
lor .several years unlir ntiiess forced
her ret.ire.ment.
Sbe leaves her parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Brewer of Villi P1rk; sisters
t1 Bernice Sutherland and Cathryn Cra ft
and her best fr)end Ruth English, of
the home.
The family suggests that those wishing
lo make memorial contributions please
('Olltribute to the Orange County branch
of the Amer ican Cancer Society.
Two Teen Girls
Critical After
Cycle Accidents
Two teenaged girls who sulfered head
injuries in ~parate motorcycle accidents
in Laguna Beach Friday nJght, remain
in critical condition in South Coast Com·
munlty Hospital today.
Brenda Jones, 19, of 5405 Bruce Cres-
cent, Newport Beach and Vic toria
Hopkin, 18, of Phoenix, Ariz. have been
in the hospital's intensive care unit since
tbe accidents, according to a hospital
spokesmen.
Steven Lawrence CWT)', 25, of the
Newport Beach address, operator of the
cycle on which Miss Jonea was a passen-
ger, was killed In the first accident which
occurred at 10:50 p.m. Friday on Park
A venue near Thurston Intermediate
School.
Miss Hopkin was inju red about ha 1 f
an hour later when the 1notorcycle on
v.·hich she v.·as a passenger crashed in
the 1500 bloc k of Temple Hills Drive.
Gary Edward Kropenic k. 3198 Alta
Laguna Blvd., operator of the cycle
involved in the second accident, escaped
with minor injuries.
Police said that none or the four vic-
tims was wearing a safely helmet and
a coroner's investigator said the dead
man .. would have had a good chance
of surviving" had he worn a helmet.
The first accident occurred when Curry
apparently Jost COl\trol of his cycle on
the steep Park Avenue HUI aDd swerved
into the hillside.
The second couple stopped lo view
the crash scene and were warned by
officers against riding at high speed
v.·ilhout crash helmets. Police claim they
sped off on their bike, only to crash
moments later on a nearby hill.
Mr. Hernandez
Rites Conducted
Funeral services were held today In
Laguna Beach for Pascual S. Hernandez,
the fa ther of Laguna Beach restaurant
owner Eduard D. Hernandez.
The elder Mr. Hernsndez died Friday
at the age of 80. He had lived in
Ne\vport Beach for 12 years an d in
·California for 70 years.
His son is the owner of Tortilla Fla ts
in Laguna Beach.
In addition to his son, Mr. Hernandez:
leaves four daughters, Maria H. Whi te,
of Costa Mesa; Dorothy Gandara and
Letha Fishe r, both o( Newport Beach,
and Marla Benvides o[ Laguna Niguel.
lie is also survived by 10 grandchildren
and 22 great·grandchildren.
CASH
LOANS
• "OLDEST AND EASIEST
WAY TO BORROW"
J\11AM1 (AP) -A 16-year--0\d high
gchool sophomore tOday boarded a Na·
tional Airlines jet at l\fobile, Ala.,
presented the stewardess a pistol instead
of a t~. and forctd the crew te
fly him to kiami, wbere be surrendered
peacefully.
Thomu Kelly Marston was cbar1ed
with aircraft piracy and held by federal
marshals at Miami for return to Mobile.
A National spokesman said the youth
surrendered to FBI agents "without any
trouble" when the 727 landed at Miami
shortly before noon. EST.
The fligbt ended almost three hours
after FBI agents said the youth boarded
the plane at Mobile, ordered 38
passengers and four stewardesses eff
and demanded to he flown to Canada.
He changed bis mind over Tennesstt
and allowed tbe crew te fly him to
Miami. The only persons aboard with
him were Capt. Robert Carter, co-pilot
Jack Graham and Flight Engineer Jerry,
Gemma.
Carter told newsmen at Miami the
youth said he wanted to go to Canada
because he was getting bad grades a.ad
bis parents were on his back.
Carter said the boy was very frighten-
ed. "He said he just wanted let get
out of Mobile. We told bim if he would
Jet us return him there, it wou1d go
easier on him. He told us Mobile was
the last place be wanted to go."
Carter aaid be soon became confident
he could talk the boy inte changing
bis mind.
"We kept talking," he said, "and when
we were over Knoxville I told blln that
anytime he decided to change his mind,
just let us know. I turned around and
looked at him and he banded me his
gun."
At. J\lobi!e, J\1arston·s fat her, Merrill
H. Marston. said his son had gotten
up and left home for school at 6 a.m.
''Much earlier th an usual." He said his
son was an average student but declined
to discuss the morni ng's events.
Tht' boy was wearing his school clotbes,
11 beige jacket an d blue shirt when
he boarded the plane. authorities said.
They also said the 5-fool-9, 15(1...pound
youth was armed with a .38-callber,
chrome-plated pistol.
Although CapL Carter sai d h1arston
told him he didn't have any problems
with a broken romance, airport police
said the youth was accompanied to the
Mobile airport by an attractive girl.
They said the couple started toward
the boarding ramp. stopped and appeared
to argue. Then the girl turned and ran
through the gate while the youth boarded
the plane, they said.
At that point. officials said , he pulled
a pistol and forced stewardess Barbara
Avery to take him into lhe cockpit
where he demanded that he be flown
lo Canada .
'Yes' Vote Asked
:8y Harbor Hills
The Harbor View Hills Homeow~rs
Associ ation board or directors today
recommended a •·yes'' vote oo both
_P.ropositions in Tuesday's Pacific Coast
Freev.·ay election.
Claiming a "yes'' \!Ole "is lo stop
the freeway.'' Robert Curci. association
president said, ··the freeway would
become a barrier between t he
homeowners and their beaches.''
He contended there are alternative
routes around the city for a freeway
and added, "the highway engineers will
not study these alternatives unlil the
present route is re voked."
Borrow lrom $5 lo $I 00, an~
more, INSTANTLY. No red
tape, no crod;t chacls. AU you
need iS -an item-for coHate fal.
NO EXl.ANA TION NECESSARY.
ALr LOANS CONFIDENTIAL:.
• Coine in cniil 5ff wliclt--.. •
offer our customen. A niw
and 1111usua1 experience In
In s h o p p I 11 IJ enjoyment,
Where people in the know
SGY• money every time they
buy.
e Fast •Friend~ e Convenient
1002 mMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
OAll.Y ,ILOT llt" ,.,,. .. ~uper-si%ed Snndpile . COSTA MES!".~~JJY!Y·-·and LOAN
Barbara Grifl i!h (left) and Maureen Hughes, bot h {our year;· old, have
a ball gal lof,i ng across artificial sanddune at foot of Sapf)hire Avenue
on BaJbos sland. Sand actually came from Irvine Company excava·
tion and will be u$ed to r eplenish beach. But the kids don't care
about those details.
•
1838 NEWPORT ILYD· PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COST A MESA -llol-n Hor .... & Bro1dw1y
'
I • I
•
-. .... ·---• =
6 DARY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
A Better Approach
Ton1orrow, Newport Beach voters are offered the
chance to vote (or or against l\\"O propositions which
are put forth by their backers as making it very diffi·
cult to put freeways in Ne,vport Beach -particularly
the proposed Pacific Coast Freeway. ,
This has to have a strong emotional appeal for most
Newporters. There are, however. two very negative as·
peels or the propositions which deserve very serious,
unemotional consideration.
If adopted. the propositions \Yill push Newport tnlo
a shoot.out with the State of California, one for which
this city is not adequately armed or prepared.
The second negative is that the propositions \YOuld
have a lasting harmful effect on the functioning of New·
port Beach city government. extending far beyond the
CoastaJ Freeway controversy.
Both proponents and opponents recognize that the
first ballot item seeking to unilaterally break the agree·
ment with tbe state unanimously adopted by the colln·
'cil in 1968 for the basic freeway alignment from the
Upper Bay through Corona de! ?ifar -probably would
challenge the state to court action. State tax money is
involved, as weU as a precedent that could affect other
freeways in the state.
The second matter -changing the city charter so
that street changes vital to freeway or expreSS\Yay agree·
meals would have to be ratified by a majority vote of
the people -probably will have to be questioned by
the Legislature, which approves charters.
Since this type of agreement nearly al\\1ays involves
modifications right up to the time of construction, the
change would be a bad legal and financial risk for the
state. Cfhe state would never be sure \Vhen it had a
binding agreement as its authority for expending large
chunks of tax money.
An even bigger concern is that the City of Ne\\'·
port Beach \vould be identified to all other government
agencies as an uncertain risk in any future negotiations.
Hope ls
Essential to -Democracies
Thoughts at Large:
The only lesson v.•e can learn from
hislory is that people will behave well
when they are filled with hope, and
badly when they are filled with fear;
this is why democracies nourish on hope,
and dictatorships rise only when fear
overwhelms the cititenry. • • •
What the acti vist
forgets is that once
you have done a
daring and desper-
ate deed, you no
longer control it -
the deed's possible
range of consequen:
ces then controls
you, and may force
you into subsequent
acts wholly unforeseen at the beginning
of the adventure. . ' . .
The journal. Environment Monthly,
provides the most tangible illustration
of our ·polluted atmosphere. in its
citation: "If all pollutants were suddenly
removed from the air, their mass v•ould
"'eigh 133 milllon tons -a greater
amount than the total na tional steel
production .·· • <
I \\'Onder how many children go
lhrough school. as I did. reciting the
Pledge of Allegience and puu.ling to
lhemselves how our nation was
''invisible" -because "Indivisible" had
never been explained to them? (Like
the child whO thought her country was
named ''Tis of thee." I • • •
An army breaks step when it crosses
R bridge. lest the lock-step of marching
lihould collapse the structure; the lesson
lo be drawn here is that a social
l)tructure, also, can break under the
Dear
Gloomy •
Gus:
How much Tonger before our U.S.
one dollar bills are v.·orlh less
than lhe paper they are printed
on?
-1. T. ~I.
n.11 !HIV,. tfPIKtt tuders' .. 111n, ""' RttKU filY I-I I tt>I IMWt.aJtr. $-
, ... , "' -·· .. OIM111r Oui. OlllY Pl .. !.
pressure or everyone marching to the
same beat. and that "unity" must not
be used as a slogan lo repress diversity.
• • •
~fost sennons preached on t h e
••valuelessness·· of material possessions
are designed to keep the many satisfied
with their tittle, rather than to make
the few dissatisfied v.·ith their lot.
• • •
One of the remaining plu.sses of city
living was neatly underscored by Peter
De Vries, when he observed : '·A
suburban mother's role is to deliver
children -obstetrically once. and by
car forever after.'' • • •
The whole mini-midi controversy ill
ludicrous on both sides for a y,·oman
should wear the length theJ is most
pleasing and appropriate to her legs,
her age, her gait, and the occasioo
for which it is worn: air other
considerations are servile and self·
defeating. • • •
Wealth depends upon a r l i f i c i a I
scarcity: if the other side of lhe moon
shoold turn-up .vast deposit.t ol gold,
enough to make every person in the
world ''rich,'' then the earth would
immediately go off the gold standard
and find some other rare medium of
fiscal-worth. • • •
When TV was born . its cultural critics
were enjoined to be patient, because
"the medium is just in its infancy";
now TV has come of voting age, and
it's just as infantile. irresponsible, and
greedily stupid as it was 21 years ago
-and tile critics are still asked to
•·wait."
'Love Story' Snubbed
SQUABBLE: New American Library
has called for a tenth printing of the
paperbound edition of Erich Segars in-
nocuous little novel "Love Story;'' bring-
ing the total c,Qpies ,in print to 6\ 7 ~illio~.
The hanf-CQver c"dlllon , oddly enough shll
tops the New York Times national best-
seller lisl after 49 weeks.
This plus the box office success or
the Ali Pt1cGrai,1.·-Ryan O'Neal movie
version spells nothing but cheer for the
author, a youngish professor of classics
at Yale.
TO OBSERVERS of Establishment
literary prize.giving. it was nol surprising
that "Love Story" was thrown out as
a candidate for the coveted Fict ion
A"·ard or the National Book Committee.
The five-member fiction jury threaten·
ed to resign If "Love Story" was nom ·
inatul. A juror-spokesman. \Villiam
Styron {"'The Confessions of Nat Tur-
ner") wac quoted: ''ft is 11 banal book
.. , Simply by being on the llst it would
have demeaned the other books.·•
Quotes
. ~· ... -
Vlrglnla 'tttarle Rodandl, Soutlli S.F.
-"We all :are engaged in an todlcss
purmit for the one qu11lity In life "''hich
1,1,·ill grant f u I f 111 m e n t . sati11factlon,
security, and above ill, happiness. This
quality ls love,"
-.
1'JJ:e l,lookinan
Erich Segal. by the way. Is a National
Book Ai,1.•ard judge , with Lillian Helman
and Thomas Lask, in the Arts & Letters
category.
"LOVE STORY" is pcrhap11 not in
the league with previow NBA fiction
winners -Nelson Algren·~ "The Man
With ttie_Col.den Arm'' to Ralph Ellison's
"Invisible Man." But it st.ands up w1th
some of the long-forgotten curiosity
piece5 that have been nominated for
these $1000 accolades over the past two
decades: and , I think, with a couple
of this year's nominees, the second-chop
John Updike. "Bech: A Book ," and
Vance Bourjaity's "'Brill Amon11 the
Ruins,"
ll may be a matter of commcrclal
succe55 that upsel!I the Establishment
llteratl as well as the fact a modem
boy-meets-girl rairy lale could capture
the Mtlonal imagination the w11y "Love
Story" has done. I hold no brklf for
1he 8'1al book -obviously not tile
"roost dl!:tingu.ilhed work or fiction
published in 1'70 ... Styron and company
might simply have not voted for Segal
ind forgotten I.he pomposity.
Wllllam Hogan
The council and the city staff could carry little weight
Jn future dealings with the state on freeway or highway
matters, nor with the county or other cities or agencies.
A record of repudiation of a major agreement and
clouding the negotiating PD"'ers of its elected represen·
tatives has to place Newport al a serious disadvantage.
There is a better way to go. 1'he city bas now at
long last undertaken a full-scale. citywide study and
analysis of its total traffic and street network problems.
\Vithin a year, this should produce some ansv.•ers
that Newport simply does not have now. on such key
que,stions as: \Vhat are the workable alternatives to a
Coastal Free\\•ay? Hovi' do \Ve co pe '''ith the problem of
crossing the bay? How do we preserve business areas
from the traffic blight that has ruined other similar
coastal areas in the Los Angeles area~
The council is not going to proceed on freeway con·
struction or any other maior road projects until this
information is available. The state has s'lid it will co·
operate with the city in this approach. And the prospec·t
for legislation permitting a city to reconsider freeway
routes within its O\vn limi ts is very good.
U. a year hence. the findings of the citizens' traffic
study committee sho\v that there are ne\v \vays to meet
our needs. there \\10uld be a good climate for selling that
view to lhe state. If the state remained unconvinced,
the city would be in a much stronger leJral and moral
Position to make a \Vinning case in the Legislature and
in the courts.
So Newport has little lo risk and a great deal to
gain by avoiding a shoot-out \vith the state at this tin1e.
Better to gather the facts -the kh1d of ammunition that
\\'ill have impact \Vith the high\vay commission and the
Legislature and if need be, the courts, before we pick a
fight that will en1broil u~ in costly problems for the next
decade or two.
~Lbr.~ The best interests of Newport Beach will be served
by voting "no" on both issues on Tuesday's ballot.
N •HERE COMES OUR (~l\<.K SPY BATTALleN."
How to Co11imu1iieate Withoaat Nagging
A Child Is Often Difficult to Fool
There ls a sens:e in which a child
understands far more lhan we suspect.
Because a child doesn "t understand words
too well (and also because his nervous
system is not yet deadened by years
spent as an accountant, advertising ex·
ecutive or professor
of philosophy ). a
child attends not on-
ly what we say but
lo everything about
us as we say it -
lone of voice. ges-
ture, fa cial expres-
sion, bod i I y ten·
sions, and so on. I
think that he at-
tends lo a cooversa-
tion between grown-
ups with the seme amaziJlg absorption.
Indeed, a child listening is, l 'hope,
like a good psychiatrist listening -
or like a good semanticist listening -
because he y,·atches not only the words
but also the nonverbal events to which
words bear, all too oflen, so unceratin
a relationship. Therefore a child is in
some matters quite difficult to fool,
especially on the subject of your true
attitude toward him. For this reason
many parents, without knowing it: are
to a greater or less degrtt in the
si tuation of the worried mother y,•ho
said to the psychiatrist to whom she
broug'lit her child, "I tell her a dozen
' "
times a day that I love her. but the
brat st ill hates me. Why, doctor?"
"LIFE IN A BIG CITY is dangerous.''
a mother once said lo me . "You hear
so often of children running thoughtlessly
out in the 11treet and being struck by
passing cars. They will never learn
unless you keep telling them and telling
them.'•
This is the kind or con1municatio11
U)COry that makes otherwi~ nice womt'n
into nagging mothers. You've got to
keep telling them. Then you 've got to
remind them. Then tell 'em again.
Are there no better ways to tea ch
children not to run out into the street?
Of course there are. I think it was '
done in our fami ly without words.
Whenever my wife crossed the strttt
with our boy Alan -he was then
about 3 -she would co1ne to a :iitop
al the curb whether there was any
traffic in sight or not, and look up
and down the boulevard before crossing.
It soon became a habit.
SO ONE DA V I absent-mindedly •
started crossing the street without look·
Ing up and .down-the street was empty.
Alan grabbed my coat and pulled me
back on the curb to look up and down
before we sl'arted out agaio. Children
love to know lhe right way to do things.
They learn by imitation far more than
by precept.
.)l'he degree lo Y.'hich tseDple rely un·
critically on the efficacy of words amazes
me constantly. Once when we were living
in .an a.Partment house, I hc11.rd a great
commotion in the conCrele courtyard
behind the building. I lociked out IAtld
saw i1. father teaching his boy to ride
a bicycle. ,
The fathtr was shouting insll'Ucliofls:
"Keep y'our head up. Now . pujh ~o}Yn
with your left fool Now look ou • you'N
ruMing into lhe wall. Steer aWay Crom
il. Steer away . from it! Now P,USh d0wn
with · your right foot. Don't .fall .do~n,!'"
and so on and so on. The poor boy
was lrying to keep his balanceL'manage
the bicycle, obey his father's instructions ·
all at the same time. He looke'd about ·
as totally confused as il ill possible
for a little boy to get.
WELL, ONE TJUNG we learn fiom
scm~nlics, if we haven 't alreadY, learned
it some other way, is thiit there. are
lim its to what can be accomplished in
words. Learning to ride a bic)rCle iJI
beyond thOse limits. And havlni: .sensed
those limits, we become ,content to let
many things take caie of themselves . .
without words. All this makes for I
quieter household.
Not that words are ool important.
They are the 'chief means by which
human beings are socialized.
Have you wondered why teen-agers
spend so much lime on the phone?
They talk on and on and on, and grown·
ups wonder what th~rc is to talk about
that takes so much time. Sometimes
young people even hang on to the phone
tor , minutes, listening to each other's
silence!!.
WllA'J''S G 0 I N G ON H E R E '!
It seems to me that adol.esetnce ill
the , ~iod . during ~hich the .child
discovers the poss)bility 0 r com-
munication outside Lhe family grou~the
ext:iting world of strangers of ooe's own
age 'who, through the exchange of 1words,
Can befome fr~ends. The young person
at this sta&e is becoming less and Jess
the child or his paret1ts and rpore and
more a member" of his own generation
-the generatiqn which, for better or
worse, will have to take o,ver lhe business
or running the'world in a.few years.
So it's part of growing up. Perhaps,
If you can afford it, )'ou should let
the .ad.olescent~ in your home have their
, own. phone lin,e.,' lt"s better than going
nuts waiting for them lo hang up.
By S. I. Haya kawa
Presldtnt
San Franclaco ~late Colle&e
-WJllie --H-0us€-ls-Ti-ghtly -l!r--eteeted
WASHINGTON -The bombing or the
Capitol building has raised urgent ques·
lions about White House security. Could
those modem know-nothings. who prac-
tice the politics of the hurled brick and
the dynamite charge, plant a bomb
anywhere near the President?
The reassuring fact is that ihe White
House, despite its pastoral setting, sits
jn the center of an
electronic entangle-
ment that has never
failed lo pick up in·
lruders.
--Jaek Andel'80n
•
'"" ran over it with a lawn mower. But
even this harmless, unpubli cized incldrnt
probably couldn't be repealed today. The
grenade thrower almost certainly wou1d
be spotted.
The tourists who stream through the
Whlte House five days a week are hustled
through the historic rooms and are kept
under constant surveillance .
THE SECRET SERVICE Is more wor·
ried about the distinguished visitors,
newsmen, aides and even bodyguards
who have personal aceess to the
President. Distinguished visitors can 't
be searched without offending them, and
lhe most trusted associates can go
berserk.
During the Eisenhower era, the rnind
of a White House correspondent suddenly
snapped on a presidential trip. He was
one of the trusted White House regulars,
representing a areat New Y o r k
new!paper.
The Incident, until now, has been hush-Back In Lyndon
.loh~son'11 day, the
Secret Service ran
a security test at
Ca mp David and
succeeded in infil-
trating the presidential retreat In Mary.
land's Catoctin Mountains. The Marines
Governrrient Liability
who guard Camp David sheepishly light-"Smog \Yarning" may be a sign or
ened ,up .their secipily. "' the times. ln a recent case a county 's
BUT Sllfl LAR attempts to penetrate ranure to waro made it liable for injury.
the White !louse grounds have failed. For days a brush fire had plagued Infiltration teams have never bttn able to slip past the all-seeing electronic eyes th e county and dense smoke filled the
that the Secret Service began installing air, In one place where it crossed lhe
around the White House 20 years ago. freeway. The county highway department
Occasional intruders. who have climbed placed small signs which one C'Ould bare·
over the White House fence. havl' been ly see in the smog and haze. One motorist
picked up 8! f!sl as they set foot had a bad accident because he could
011 the lawn. -'not see.
About JO years ago , son1eone managed
lo flip a hand grenade-happily. a
dud-over the fence. It went undetected
until a member of the grounds crew
By 6eor9e ---..
Dear George:
How doe11 it feel lo be dependent
on letters from lbe crackpots o(
the naUon? ANNOYED
Dear Annoyed :
In your case lt. reels expenJJlve
-)'Our letter CJ1.roe. postage due. ~
<Send your problems to George
and have your worrying done by
professiona l incompetents.)
I
811.L SUED THE county for his in·
Juries. And at his trial hii; lawyer put
on expert proof that tl'le roadsigns were
loo small tor that strip of hlghw:iy .
The county bad not taken adequate care
tn put na~s or • otherwl~ warn the
motort.st. The city had kM\\'n of the
fires and smog for several days. The
cily had not taken proper action to
protttt motorists. Bill rould make the
county pay for his Injuries.
The government ls liable. just like
privatt citizens, for dangerous and dcfcc·
Uve conditions. As .. a properly owner
the government mual act reasonably.
Exampltr: Inadequate hiRh\\·ay signal!'
and lights:. faulty stop signi;, lack of
sfgn11, shrubbery covering a sign, failure
to w!rn or 1 sharp curve, a sudden
-· Law 1 In Actioh ,_ l .
boltlenec.k, or an u.oguarded hole or
a slippery surfact'.
l\tERE FAILURE lo Install control
signals is generally not negligence. But
removal o( a ~ign. say for rep11irs,
without warning ls' negligence.
Before the government becomes liable,
It must have noUt-e or should be aware
of the dangerous ecndlllon , But notice
c1tn be. "constructive notice" which ari.~s
fr om the long-continued existence of a
dcfeetive condition. 'Ille fact that there
Mve betn many otl¥'r i1lccldcnls because
of inadequate warning In a place n1a y
itself be the net.oded •·conslructive
notice." 1
The state also needs enough time to
correct tht. dangers. If they arise. say.
from an unc.xpec.ted storm which causes
~ !raffle slgna l lo be stuck on "Roi''
the olfy Is not liable If It "lacked' enli
to correct It.
Nott: Californfd lawt1t r.s offtr lhlt
col11 rru1 10 you mo11 k11ow about 01'£r
laws.
ed up. But the late dean of Wh ite
House correspondents, Merriman Smith,
overheard the man muttering in-
coherently that be intended to kill the
President. Smith lunged at the man
and grabbed him around the neck.
THERE WAS A brief tussle. The New
York reporter slammed Smith to toe
floor and ·stomped on his face. But
Secret Service agents quickly moved in
and hustled the berserk correspondent
away.
Security is necessarily intensive arolind
Air fl'orce One, the presidential pla11e.
All luggage is carefuJly inspected for
hidden weapons. Crewmen are ordPred
never to let the baggage out of their
sight.
On rare occasions, a crewman has
turned away rrom the luggage long
et1ough to buy a cigarette or a Coke.
Quickly, quietly, Air Force security men
bave--l~n 114"antag~ of h~ inatt_ent1on
to plant smo~e bombs Jn the luggpge.
When t~e crewman has discovered the
smoking luggage, he has been reminlled
that it could have been a real bomb.
Conclusion: The chances are poor that
the know-nothings will be able to ~low
up any of the presldenttal facilities.
-~--
Monday, March 8, 1971
Tltc editorial page of the DaUu
Pilot setk& to inform and 1tim·
ulate readers by prtsnting thl.t
T1ewspaper's oµh1ion1 and con~
rnentary un topics of interest
ond sign lficanct, bu providing a
forum for tht e~re.ssion o/
our readers' oplnion.s. cmd lit
presr.11ting tht dluerst vitw-
e_nhtU gJ .. jf)jonned_observtr•_
and tpokemien on topici of the
da11. -
Robert N. Weed, Publisher
,
Huge Russ
Missiles
Reported
....
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen.
Honry M. JocklOn (0.Wuh.),
N1' hll dllCIOl\U'e that Ruula
II depioylnl now lon(-<ance
rnlutlea 0 polnll up the need
!er .. OYfMll .........,,t with '
the 5ovtet IJnlan to Umlt both
offenalve and d e f e n 1 I v e
weapoos."
'Ibe Wuh11'1fton senator'•
disciol<n, SUpported by the I
Defeme Department. came~
,
SUnday, only a week befo"' MAKIS DIScLOSURI
U.S. and Soviet "'llOUaloro ·--U--J-~---
r.tum to the Strategic Arms----·-~--"----Llmltatl<ll TllD In VieJUla.
Malld11, March 8, 1971
Vledms Kn.lfed
Motorcycle Club
Battle Kills 5
Negro Churc"(i.es
Hit by Firebombs
TEXARKANA, Tex. (AP) -
T\j1l Negro BapUsl churches
were destroyed by flames and
CLEVELAND (AP) members also curled cbalnl, two others we.. llrfrbombed
Pollee Prosecutor Ever«t: clubs and guns. over the weekend In thll Tex·
O\tndJer pnipared rloti and 'lbree 'Of the dead were as-ArkansaJ border city, aceoe
mulder ebarges today agalnst Breed member1 -Bruce of recent racial disorder.
IOl1* of the rt motorcycle Emerick, at, of VennUloc, Two of the churches burned
glllf membera arrested after B h 'T . eUly Saturday with damage a fl&hl that left ftve dead and Ohio; Thomas A. Terry, %2, ay estJDg estbnat.d at IJ'IS,000. One WU
21 lnjured, tncludlnc three of BroadvJ'w Heights. a ftre..bombed tater Saturday
polloemen. Cleveland suburb; and Andrew Out Water' and another w., t(1e target
Police Said the Saturday C. Demeter, 30, ef South of a fire bomb early Sunday.
night batUe Involved l!itl to Amboy, N.J. MILWAUKEE. Wis. (UPI) Fire Marshal Ed Berbig,
'1111 members of the B~ The others, both Hell's -Sen. Birch Bayh (0.lnd.), who said he expected a deputy
and 30 members of the rival Angels, were Emelio Gardull, has IOri of stepped into the state ffre marshal to enter
Hell'• Angels. 32, of Bristol. PL, and Jeflrty 1972 presidenUal race, but the investigation. told a
They u.ld tbe fight at the Coffey,~ of New York. ·l!lays be will spend most· ol newsman, "I can prove two
largell Negro c:huri:h, Mount
Orqe U.ptlst. Tb< big plndet
block bolJ<!IDi WU tedUeed to ,
ruins and Ito putor estimated
dam1ee at tJ00,000. •
Al..firemen were prepa;..tng
to leave the scene of, the llnl,
blaze, an alann wu turned
In for another tire a\ Sl Paul
Baptist Church.
The Rev. B. · C. ~ Green,
putor at Sl Paul, llld be
and other penons heard .what
sounded like an explosion at
the rear of the .church. '-rhe
entire rear aectlon of the
chur'cb wu In flames when
we heard the ooi.!e," he said.
He estimated damage at
lt75,000.
Estate Told
Tbe full inventory of
the late Sen. Everett
Dirksen's estate, filed
last week in Illinois,
disclosed the senator .
. bad $53,879 in umpent
campaign funds and a
total of $305,235 at the ·
time of his death in
1969. It allo followed by ~
daya Pmldent Nlmn'• clear
njectlon d a Soviet proposal
lo nocb ._ment covering
anttmtaUe defense syatem1
-telJ from o lien 1lvi
weapono.
Unexpected
fourth an nu a I Motorcycle cyTclisents %m:ened ,,h~ the year testing the water of them were arsor;:;:__ 1 ~m and Trade Show on _,,,_ before deciding on a formal A wind-whipped ~ ear Y
the clty'o east olde wu the in criUcal coodillon. campaign. , Saturday destroyed the dty'a result of• yeai.Jooa feud· ________ _,_ __ .:....;::,_ _____ ,;_ __ ..;..._.....;c ___ '-------------,.-,.,-,,,..,-•• -.. -,-,-,.-..,-....,.,,~---
'lblJ tlmlng lid to specul•
t1on that the NI x on
Adm.inistraUon bad f e d
Jacboh information about tbe
new Ruuian mlulle develQP-
menl
Tfiougb a Democrat and a
pouible Nixon opponent next
year, Jack>on .,.... with the
admlnllttation on m a n y
defeme luues.
r
Rail Strike
Postponed
between the two ganp.
The &how Wll belnl held
in the Hall of the Auoclatlon
of Polish Women in the U.S.
to raiH money for crippled
c:hllmn.
Br,ed members gathered
near three motorcycles being
dlaplayed by Hell'1 Angela and
oomebody toucbed oU the
fighting with a shout of
"Now!" police uld.
o-----~'l'lle.-Wblleo-llou11 doclined
comment aft.er Jacbon said
on TV, ''The RU!Sians are
now in the process of deploy-
ing a new generation, an ad-
vanced generation offensive
l)'Stem."
WAS!DNGTOll (UPI) -
The Unljed ,...ansportatlon
Union called a strike 11ainlt
two major railroad.a Sunday
night but then vol-.Uy
postponed JI nntil 'lbuisday
when the Jines uked a federal
judge to bloek a walkouL
:nie • tr-4-t e-WU..,. called
without advance notice for
midnight Sutxtay against the
Burlington Northern and the
Seaboard Qwt Line railroads.
Tb< rapidity of the' Im!
In calling ft off indicated tbe
action was a strategy move
by the union since ''selectlve
strikes" have been naled 1J.
legal by federal judget In
some similir cases In the
past.
"We didn't i:now where to
turn," uld Patrolman Thomas
Burton, who WU in the ball
wben the fitJhllng began. "We
just started clobberJng
everybody."
About 150 police converged
on the scene and tear gas
WIS used te break up the
mob.
•
•
5 Officers
Hit in NY
Shootout
NEW YORK (UPI) -Five
dty policemen were shot, J)(llle
Kriously, in a shootout SWlday
night with a gunman allegedly
st.I.eking up an "adult" movie
_theater near Timea: Square.
'Jbe gunman WU killed-at
the scene.
An alleged robbery ac-
eumpllct "as take• into police
custody.
Three of the patrolmen were
released from a hospital
following treatment f o r
gumbo! wounda. A Ueutensnt
who wu wounded five times
wu tn saUsfactory condition
as was the fourth patrolman.
A police dep·artmen t
spokesman said the lieute11ant,
Joseph Destefano, was shot
twfct In the left arm, twice
Jn the left leg and once in
the rlght leg. The other officer
admitted for treatment was
He.my Koster, shot once In·
the right arm. The gunplay
took pfaoe at the A van-Orleans
Theater for mature adults n
West 47th St. at 11:15 p.m.
Neither· the dead man nor
the man taken Into custody
was bnmedJately identified.
~¥ •
Negotiations aimed a t
avoiding a natiOl'Jwide strike
• were recessed Saturday -
without any date for new talks
-to allow each lide to study
the other's ofters and to
prepare for more diSCl;ISSions.
Union official! postponed the
strike against Burlington and
Seaboard Ul'ltil Z p.m. EST
'Jbursday to give U:S. District
Judge John H. Pratt time to
ammge a hearing on the
raJlroads' request for • tem-
porary NStraining o rd e r
against the strike.
Selective -or ''wh.ip!law"
-strikes have been stopped
on three otber octaslons by
federal coUrts which ruled
that when a unlon ' bargains
collectively with several com·
panies, it cannot strike selec-
tively against only a few of
Police said all of the deed
and wounded W.!ft knife vie-
Ullll. Tbey said · (a D (
Court Bars
NY Teacher
Dismissals
NEW YORK (AP) -A state
Supreme Court order has tem-
porarily blocked the Board of
EducaUon from beginning to-
day 1 aeries of economy
measures that includes the
dismlsaal of 16,500 employes,
moaUy substitute leac\lers.
'!'be boon! said It would obey
the order and allow the city's
public schooll to conUnue to
hire 10,000 peNllem subltltute
tuchers, who had been due
to be laid off today.
'I1le layoffs -which were to extend next Monday to cer·
taln full-time t e a c h erg , -them.
Policies Paid
• 5Upervlsors and c 1 e r I c a 1
employes -were among
measures ordered by the
board last week to bridge a
HARTFORD, Conn. (AP) -f40 million gap between the
'Ibe beneficiaries of penson1 money lt says It has and what
killed in two air crashes in-it needs to finish the school
volvlng college football teams year.
have received $1.9 million The court order, signed Sun-
from inswance po 11 c I es day by JusUce Thom as
carried by the vicUms the Rus!el.I Jones, stopped all cut..
Aetna Life and Casualty Co. backs until a hearing before
reports. him l!let for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday.
~""""'=--~~
I 'B _ -
13 'Floor Samptes & Discontinued
3 and 5 Piece Bedro0ni Sets, Go
On Sale Today a,f :V2 PRICE
Rei)ular $499.00 to $1395.00
NOW $249 to $695
• Alsoa Ocld Chests· Dressers, Headboards,
Niie Tables & Mirrors AH · Go at V2 Price
COME EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS !
H.J.GAR.R.ETT fURNlllJ~E
'PROFESSIONAL 1 2215 HAUOR ILVD.
INTERIOR DESIGNERS o,... Mon., Tllvn. & ,,f. ''"' COSTA MISA, CALIP. '46-0271 '46-027'
11 ·I
hose buggers have
· Clingtex• Ieg bands underneath the
n7lon lace trimming: that do the Job or keeping1our
paDIJ hDH •inooth and unWrinkled. thal hold up long 1tre&ch be.
without prten, that keep girdles fll'Dll:t In plaoe
evenlfyoudon'twearbose hose buggers!
SALE PRICES In effect £or1'1!ayo onl.
IUlHA ,AlK
CAHOOA ,AllC
COMPTON
•
.... ,_ --'°"" llACK
partner for
pantyhose
(now at terrific savings)
SAVE $land$2
on all of these
sale 3.9 9 to 499
regular •s and •7
Key to 1uceeos with panty hose: A Sears hose httl!ll••
1lipped on over them to ensure srnootl1nes.s, prevent
11g and odd the right measure of control and support.
And hose buggen do a superb job-0fholding up long
1tretcb bo1e wlthotit prtl!t'I. Nylon and 1p1ndex tri•
cot body fabric ii ooft but penuaoive. Center back
-m for natural look. Color: Calla-Lilly (ivory).
RegularS7, 17·inch panty girdle: S.M-L-x .. 1. __ u,99
Regular S7, Mid-leg: S.M.t. $4.99
Regular$5, Brief: S.M.I. $3.99
Ol\'.MtaMO -·-
.. -CliAl\GE IT on Sean Re•olving Cbargo
MO IANtAn .,.INU
1POMONA '""'" MOtttCA tMfA AIM IOUTit COMt' fUb
tMOUl4HO 04II ... ..... .. ...., -• rrwt......,,.,.,, .. ,.,_,, ..... -
' '
• ,
., ..
<
.
'
. \
I
I I
I
I '
l
·I
l
I ,
I
•
,.
' '
[
f
•
• • •
•--t ... ~--~· •• ·----' .
/
BEA ANDERSON, Editor MtnUY .. ~dl t. 1rn N ,. ... ,,
Great Day
A-d·awning
•
Strike up the band and fly high the pennants!
On Sunday, March 14, at 11 a.m. with all official pomp, dedication
ceremonies will get under way for the opening of the Bahia Corinthian Yacht
Club in Corona del Mar, a new facility four years in the planning.
After being piped aboard by Sea Scouts, Commodore JOhn P. Hooten
will welcome members and guests. In the colorful ceremony to follow there
will be a three gun salute, a salting down sea water ritual, music by the Es-
tancia High School band and an official ribbon cutting in which Commo-
dore Hooten will be joined by house committee chairman Staff Commodore
T. Patrick Dougan. ·
Dedication addresses will be given by Staff Commodores David A.
Domanskio and Dougan.
Luncheon will be served in the main dining room at noon and again
at 2 p.m., with--seatirtg by-reservation only. There will be-continuous refresh·
ment service in the Columbia Room.
A luncheon and youth program for tho se under 21 is scheduled for
noon in the Junior Club Room below deck .
Mrs. Carl H. Noecker is a dedication day chairman. Co-chairmen have
been Miss Jeanette L. Afitchell colloborating with Staff Commodore Howard
C. Langley, ceremonial ·programming; the Mmes. \Villiam C. Adams, lunch-
eon ; S. McKee Thompson, invitations and Brian R. Carter, reservations.
Robert H. Jessen has been in charge of the youth program and ac·
tivities, and Mrs. Herbert R. Hope and Ralph M. Tandowsky, publicity.
.......... --....... . •
WELCOME ABOARD -Staff .Commodore. T. Patrick Dougan
swings wide the door-Of Bahia Corinthian ¥acht Club, to be dedi·
cated on Sunday, March 14.-.Mrs. Dougan (center) joins Mrs. Carl
H. Noecker, dedication day chairnian, in proudly extending golct.::..
ker bearing club's initials to sym~lize official opening of th8Jf~
cihly in Corona del Mar. • ·;1A-
/
/
, ,
' ,
'Getting· Involved'
Spells Assistance
There will be just cau se for pride when Las A1arineras Auxiliary
gathers on · Wednesday, March 10, in the t.:orona del A-1ar home of Mrs. Ken·
neth Holloway for an annual luncheon honoring ne\v members and patronesses. ·
It .ha~ been more than a year since the auxiliary to the Family Serv·
ice. As~c1at1on of Orange Cou nty successfully opened its family counseling
office In Corona del fl1ar and Mrs. James Pouty, Las fl1arineras president
will be giving a report on its progress.
. Joining fl1rs . Douty in greeting gi.iests for the 11 :30 a.m. luncheon ~111 be Mr~. Frank Marshall, membership and patroness chairman. A bu s-
iness meeting at 10:00 a.m. will precede the event.
Seven new members will be \\1elcomed at the luncheon lnclud·
ing the Mmes. John Britton. Robert Hildenbrand, Peter Hoffman, Robert
fi.lcLaughlin . D. V. Skilling, Frank Stillwell and John Stollsteiner.
. "'-" -~
• •
.. . :;x
.. ..
• •
• " •
Auxiliary patronesses-to be-honored-are-the-Mmes. Joseph Bee<,~· ---~-..---1
----n:arth Bergeson, 'l'ully Brown, Paul Broxon. Donald Suttle. Earl G. Corkett, ·!
H. B. Lawson, \Vayne Slocum . Robert Sv.1ink, James \Vaydelich, Jo \Veidman and Edgar Witmer.
A~cording lo Mrs. Douty, anyone wan ting to make an application
for appointment at the Family Service Association office in Corona del Mar
may call the Family Serv ice Tustin headquarters for an appointment.
~amities who are able to pay are requested to contribute toward the
counseling expenses, but professional advice is available always at little or no cost.
All type s of acute family problems ma y be handled by the service.
Mrs. Donald Hildenbrand. social worker is in charge of the office, which is
open on A-1ondays and Thursdays from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m.
•
•
. • PEOPLE TO PEOPLE-Consuliing ways to help a ·
family Solve its problems are (left lo right) ~s. Don-
ald Hildenbrand, counselor in charge of the Family
Service Association office sponsored by· Las · Marin·
eras AuxUiary ln Corona· dcl . Mar, Mrs. James
Dowty, •president, and Mrs. Robert ·Hildenbrand,
new member of the group.
Members of llarbor Area families ma y come to the office with marl·
lat. problems, or parents may discuss their problems -with children. Older ~hild~en also may seek advice over problems with parents. All those need-
!ng either short term or intensive, long term, counselin'g advice may come
· 1n aqd receive the attention of a sympathetic listener. ·
Las Marineras Auxilliary members have stepped forward as citizens
who do want to "get involved" with the lives of others.
• ...
-• • ~ .. . ~
Wife Awakens, Finds Prince Charming a Real Sleeper
;. : . . .
••
. ..
DEAR ANN LANDERS: My husband
is 1 husky, healthy 37·ytar-old . man -
a perfect physical specimen. Yel, we
have no social life, no home life and
very liltle sex life. Why? Because he
sleeps all the time.
ANN LANDERS
Wheriever we go anypla~ he asks
me to drive (even lo the store) so does he sleep so much?" -The answer
he can sleep. He sleeps in front of was, "He's probablf , tired." Ann, he
the TV. sleeps when we go lo 8 movie, doesn't lift a finger when he comes
11ceps during basketball games and has home from work. Any suggestions? -
rven fallen asl~ pl~ylng poker.~ His MRS. RIP VAN WINK~ Idea ol a vacation 11 to crawl In bed ..-... -,.
and sleep for an hour or two three-DEAR !\fRS. RIP : Your "beallhy...,...
times a day. horse" l1111baod probably has a metabolic
Three months ago at my Insistence sy1tem that ttqUim more rest than
he had his thyroid and blood sugar moRt people. Add Co this lbe poulblllly
checked and his heart and stomach X· that he 11 bored. Sleep can be u escape.
r11yed. When the doctor said, "He's Try this eJperlmenl the next tfme the
henlthy as a horse," I asked, "Why horse falls a1leep eutakle of btd: WUe
him ap ind askDlm wb1t bt1d REALLY -
like lo do. If he tays "sleep," I give
up.
DEAR 'fNN LANDERS: The lo\ter
from the mother whose son was selling
hit: homework prompted me to write.
f am 1 teacher who ha.! had con·
siderable e1perience with cheaters. ·The
student who believes he can co p y
homework and gf!t ·away with ills stupid .
II Is easy for a teacher to discern_
which student prepared the original work
and which student copied it.
At the beginning of each semester,
1 announce that any student who copies
or allows his worlc to be copied will
automatically get an F. I then hand
out a meino so there will be oo
misunderstanding. This has virtually
eliminated cheating In my classes. or
course a few smartles have to test
me, but they !OOn discover t mean
business·. Prtnt his · If you like. but
oo name or city, please. -ALBERT'S
TEACHER
DEAR TEACHER :~ T'hanks for your
letter, and for the attached memo which
I would like Co reprint. ,.
MEMO TO THOSE WHO
ALLOW THEIR WORK
TO BE COPIED :
You are cheating lbe person who
copies. If tie fails to do tbl1 uslgnment
be does not leara. If be doe1 not learn
be cannot do well on bJs exam. A<r e
you being fair IO him? )
You are cbealing lbe classmate wbo
ha1 NOT done bis assignment but Is
honest enougll to admit it. This pu101,
thfttlgh unprtpared, tata\ least essurnlng
responslblllty for hlmseU. Are you belnc
f1lr to him?
You arc taking 1 chance on being
found out and rttelYlng an t'. Are you
belng lair to your1elf?
MEMO TO THOSE WHO
COPY FROM OTHERS :
• You are cbeatl~ the. per'!_'!_ w_ho -~~·
-.
doae ._ """· u lie Je1a eupt " •
gets aa F. '""' )"Oii belal fllr lo llf.m?
You are ckatla& lite clulllllte wM ..
bas NOT done ltfs work but la boDtlt •
enough to take reepoulbUity for llimaelt. ...
Are you being fair to~? ' ..
You are not gettht1 the btnefJt er
learning nor will you be able to p111 .
the es:am when die time comes. An
)'oU belng fair lo yoursel:'
' Do you feel ill at east .. , out o[
it? Is everybody having a good time
but you? write for Ann Landers' booklet,
'"The Key to PoPUlarlty," enclosinf 'l!!Th ·
your request 3fi cents in coin and -,
long. &elf-addressed, stamped envelope ;
In care o( the DALLY PILOT. • '
'
)
I
. . • . . -
I ll DAILY i'ILOT
. '
MondlJ, Morch a, 11n
Effervescent Bubble Brunch Aids Philanthropies
•'
:1
.
' ' ,
,
~ ' ' , ·'
..
..
' • ,
. ,
• • .
Sparkling with enthusiasm are Mrs. Edward Dziura·
"'iec (left) and h1rs. Ardis Barkley, members of the
Altrusa Clu b of Newport Harbor. The club will spon·
sor a champagne Bubble Bru nch at 11 :30 a.m. Sun·
day, March 14, in the Costa Mesa Country Club.
Let's Talk Girl Talk
'·SCOUTING ABOUT'' is the Eighty·lwo girls fr om
'title of a program planned Brownie troops 144 and 546,
by Girl Seoul troops of Irvine Junior troop 1860 and Cadelle
School in Ea st Irvin!! fr om troop 665 will parlicipale.
7 to 1:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Chairmen for the event are
~tarch 9, in the multipurpose Mrs. Earl Harwell and ~1rs.
room. Ste\•en Bosbonis.
. ,,
• B. D. HOWES
.:
.,. IS
HAVING
A
SALE
• B.D. HOWES and SON
fl:<tJI Wt LtR.S f OR. THR.Lt Gt:<liMT!O:<S
N[V,?ORT BE.\CH: l412 Via Lido • 675·2i21
'
Proceeds will be used for the Harbor Area Boys and
Girls Clubs, Youth Employment Service. March of
Dimes and other worthy causes. Ticket information
may be obtained by calling Mrs. Sandy Carlson.
•
Double Ring Rite
Afternoon Vows Said
Reciting their wedding vows E o
in the Community Congrega.
tional Church (If Corona del
Mar were Christine Sue Callis
and Scotl Dillman Rhorer.
Officiating for the afternoon
double ring ceremony was the
Rev. Dr. Phillip Murray.
The bride, daughter or the
late Robert L. Callis and Mrs.
John King Malcomson, was
given in marriage by her step-
father. Parents of th e
bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs
l\1 illon Rhorer of Phoenix .
Attending the pair were
Miss Nancy Makely as maid
of honor and David Haines
of Phoenix as best man.
Ushers were Robert and
William Callis, brothers of the
bride.
A 1968 Children's Home
Society deb utante, the bride
was graduated from Corona
det Mar High School and at·
!ended Northern A r i lo n a
University, where she was a
member of Alpha Della Pi.
Her husband is a graduate
MRS. SCOTT RHORER
Phoenix Hom•
or Iha~ university and an af-
filiate of Sigma Chi.
The Rhorers v.·ill make lheir
home in Phoenix.
Volunteers Prog rammed
Bureau Picks Leaders
Linking people in 11eed and
nonprofit assistance agencies
is the job of tlle Volunteer
Bureau nf West 0 r a n g e
County, which provides the
personnel to staff the assorted
service groups.
During a noon luncheon
1nmorrow. bure1111 members
will meet In the Oranae home
of Mrs. Robert Glass lo honor
new officers for the coming
)'ear.
Taking oUict will be J0tl
Klein. preside11t ; Miss Beverly
Webb, vice pres ide nt ; Mrs.
Charles JeMette. secreLary
<1nd Mrs. William Suter,
treasurer.
The Volunteer Bureau ,
located in Garden Grove, is
entering its fourth year of
recruiting, screening and plac-
ing volunteers, a r r a n g i n g
<'mcrgency transpor1atinn
through social worktrs and
assisting agencies with mail·
iPlg.
Visit the Elizabeth Arderl'Red Door
• ·-. I
•.• it's a be autifying experi ence
Let our experts give your skin
a wonderfully refres hing treat-
ment ••• and a new ma ke-up.
Yo u'll not only loo_k .your
best, you'll fee l marvelous!
Complete treatmen t w ith
makeup, 10.00.
Beauty Salon
M~nicurrs • Pfdic.ures • Facii ls
• llec.trolysis
•
.......
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Pisces: Refuse Intimidation
TU~SOAY
MARCH 9
By SYDNEY OMARR
A1trology buff cl11b1 are
sprln1tn& up around lhe coun-
try. One of tllle leading groups
co nducts regula r mee.tln11 In
Lo1 Angeles, featuring guest
1peaker1 who relate l1te1t fin-
dings ln astrology. Surprising
to many, numerous prominent
bu1lne1sme1 attend tbeM: C11D·
fi bs, a.loa1 with c o 11 e I e
1tudeat1 and a dan.Un1 array
of brt&bt. attrattlve carur
women.
ARIES (March 21-April 19):
Original ideas pay off. By
being inventivt , you turn a
profit. Don't be afraid lo
break through to new, fertile
territory , Utilize n a t u r a I
pioneering qual ities. Make a
mark.
TAU RUS (April W.May 20):
Accept responsibility. Pace
may be slow; goal, however,
is worthwhil.e. Stress is on
how you handle home, pro-
perty. domestic stiuaUons.
Alm for £uture. Realize poten·
tial.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Don 't attempt to be
everywhere at once. Avoid
scattering your forces. Ex-
change idtas with neighbors,
relatives. Avoid arguing over
minor matters. Plenty of fun
now if vou are flexible .
CANCER (June 21 ..July 22 ):
Don't spend merely to impress
others. Get what you need.
Obtain money's worth. Insist
on quali ty. One who makes
many promises could come
up empty-han~. Anticipate-
act accordingly.
LEO (July 23-Aug. 22): You
find way of fulfilling some
obligations, ambitions. Utilize
experience. I m p r e s s pro-
Luncheon
handicap is due to be remov·
ed.
fessional superior by polishing IF TODAY JS Y 0 UR
techniques. Spec la I rela· BlRTffDA Y you are capable
tionship Is cemented. You of perceiving trends. You tan
learn where you stand. ~ovlde whal others -·A.i To flM out~ wllo'1 luckv '°"t •-
) 1ia:u ln ._¥ • lo¥•· oro" ~ .,,.,
VIRGO (Aug. 23-Sept. 22 : fore they become aware ~:r•:rld~~.::.s1e~ ti~f,,'~1r.
Cooperative efforts should be of actual requ irements. Social C'r11~ 1:"RA.1t°v ~~T. ::!rt::
advocated. Heed one who has life improves. An emotional Gr•M c1H11r11 .s1111o11. Ntw Yor~
a i d e d y o u i n p a s t . -----------;;;;;'·;;;v.;;'i;i~;;;";;;· ------mjj PhiJOSQPhical concepts are lr
emphasized. Look beyond the
immediate. Be conCf:rned with
potential.
U BRA (Sepl 23-0cl 22):
Funds you took for granted
could be held up in litigation.
Plan accordingly. New view
is essential. Highlight different
methods. Leo individual could
prove to be valuable ally.
SCORPIO (Oct. 23-Nov. 21 ):
Contractual obligations surge1 to forefront. You get nothing
for nothing. Know th is -
share knowledge. Obtainl
cooperation of one who tan
aid your cause. Alm high -
stick to principles.
SAGI1TARIUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Some person s
perfonn extraordinarily well
for you. Give them credit.
Extend s o c i a I invitations.
Time to show appreciation.
Change of pace is beneficial.
Relax -have fun.
CAPRICORN {Dec. 22-Jan.
19): Money, past CGm·
mitmenls mingle. Keep guard!
up; protect yourself. Some ere
envious, even spiteful. Don't
compound error. ~1 a in la i n1
balance. Dispatch tasks with
aplomb. I
AQUARIUS (Jan. 21).Feb.
18): Lie low; do pltnly of
listening, observing. Practical
issues dominate. Home, pro-I
perty areas demaiid attention.I
Do some investigating. Write,
communicate. Ask plenty of
questions.
PI~ (Feb. 19-March
20): Relative may make
unreasonable demands. Seek l
adjustment in domestic arta.
But refuse to be intimidated.
Be diplomatic. ?-.1 a k e in·i
telligent concessions. B u t
know when t() draw line.
Crown,rig Glory
beauty salons
SHAG CUT ..• SHAG PERM
The new longer. look I Beautifully
curled by our carefree perm. Complet•
sggs
BUDGET PERM •••••• alw•v• •596
(Norm al Hai r)
MonTue1W1d l1tffW11t
SHAMPOO-SET
STYLE CUT
295
1 ••
341
2 00
Styl!st prlc11 slightty higher
Speaker ~~~r:;~~~:~,~!~=:·-l Ol'IN TO THI PUILIC .
Intrigues ~ ..... 5.~~·~f. ...
11....,~~~·~·~·~·~··~·~w~·~·~,,~.~~~
SOUTH COAST PUZ.A 261 I 17th ST., COSTA MISA
Low•r L1~•l-N1 xt lo S11r1 Pho11e 141·ff1t
Ph1111• 54'·7116 Open E.,111in91 I Sund1y
Open E~1n i1191
WI CA•• 1""1 yeul ~t ywr Ms!\
Members won't need a liitlhli
sense to Jure them to Mesa w h SALE Harbor Club's luncheon on
Thursday, March 11, in the I re ouse Mesa Verde Country Club.
Fea1ured " speaker ror the
w1y at 10:31> a.m.. is Mrs occaslon. which will gel under SAVE Up TO . sao.!
Beverly DeLong, whose an·
nounced topic is ESP -
Especially for You.
MriUaled with the Psynelics CALO RI c· Foundation of Orange, Mrs.
DeLong will talk about extra·
sensory perception aod explain CLEANS BOTH OVENS how tn develop it. She plans
lo demonstrate her own ESP AUTOM' AT'/CALLYJ ability on members or the I 1 H I J
luncheon audie nce.
Church Plans
Three-day Sale
A wide r1nge of items will
be. available whe11: members
or St. Anne's Church. Seal
&ach, open the doors or the
parish hall for their annual
rummage sale on Thursday,
March II,
Co-chainnen for the sale,
which will continue through
March 13 are Mrs . Michael
Spisak and Mrs. Victor Virzi.
Hours w!\I be from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Evenings
Go Casual
The evenin~ cardigan
typifies today's tasual way
dressing for lnlimate little din·
ners or at-home parties.
Monet suggests h.ighlighting
the loolf'with a tiered tis.set.
THE RED
BALLOON
LTD. ...............
fuhlon school . , ,
lev•rlM K•ll•y
charm fashion &. modelln& for boys A: (irb;.
classes begin r-.1arch 15.
c&ll for resPn·ations . .._.,....
tllf" nt•ll oltli,hllnllr un11u11I
thil•ltto'• olurr in 1ht 111111hl111J
16877 Aliconquin ~I •
.... 111'\"I t.,~:tnl'O t1:~111
(T1 4 146-1666
The UL TR A-CLEAN• "PyrofyUc" Self-Cle1nlnQ syatem cf Catorlc Gas Ranges cleans the Lower Bro!1er/Oven and the
removable sides, baclt and bollom panels ol the upper overt
completely, thoroughly, totally-au\omaUcally, in less than 2 hours, for loss than a nlckel al pormal gas rates.
PLUS ' e ULTR.A-RAY e infra-red broilar
ch•rbroils m••+1, smokelass e Autom•tic m1 et pr~be
e Tim•d cook & keep warm ov•n e Rotisse rie e Lo•d•d with extr•s
SAVE $$ ON DISCONTINUED MODELS
FLOOR SAMPLES • , • DEMOS NOW
REDUCED TO CLEAR !
CALORIC GAS
RANGES AS LOW AS
$17CJ95
Jnt"!Jrlt11 and De.pe11dabllll11 Sl11ce 1947
411 I. Stvtntttnth St ..
60·1614 t1o11, ,., Sat. ,_,
7
7
. ' ~ ...... ·-.
Costa. Mesa
• " . • .. '• 0 I
•
VO[. 64, NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MOND:AY, ~RCH f, 1971 TEN CEfllTS
• esa river
, . L~--~~--~
: ' ,
~· l . /. ... .. j ·~
\IP'I T1lff"*fn
Aged Funds
Supported
By Nixon
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Nixon
Administration will support a proposal
to provide a minimum annual income
for the estimated six million aged poor
in the United States. a Social Security
Administration-official diSclosed MCind"ay.
"It's a logical development from the
President's proposed welfare reform:•
Mrs. Charlotte Crenson, press .officer
for the agency. told UPI.
FRAZIER, LEFT, SAYS HE'S COOL: THEN BOMB SCARE
Muh1mm1d Ali, Ever Confident, Punches Small Bag
The guaranteed income proposal -
which would assure persons 65 or older
between $90 and $130 a month -was
originated by the powerful House Ways
and Means Committee during closed
hearings on welfare and Social Security
benefits.
The ·proposed income floo r also would
be extended to 80.200 hlind and 899,000
disabled citizens presently on welfare.
Security, Tension High
For Title Fight Tonight
The government estimates that about
one out of every four · Americans over
65 falls below the federal poverty level .
Nearly one-third of these 6 million elderly
persons receives welfare-assistance.
The federal poverty level currently
is Sl.900 a year for an aged person
Jiving alone, but welfare payments foi:
the elderly, the blind and the disabled
vary from state to state.
NEW YORK (AP) ..... A vague bomb
scare,.a reported thriat on Joe Frazier's
lift lDd tightened security measures ad-
ded to the theatrical attnosphere as
tension mounted for to n I g h t ' a
heavyweight title fight between Frazier
Hartelius Jury
To Hear Claim
By Prosecution
By TOM BARLEY
Ot 1M ~llY P'llM 11111
An Orange County Superior Court jury
and Muhammad All (See sports, Page 23). .. .
Eight d<tecttv.. wi!re said lo be
1111Tdin1 Frazier and his Manager.
Yance;y Durham, after the heavyweight
charil.pion reportedly received a letter
and later an anonymous telephone call
threatening his life if he did not throw
the fight.
Ffazier· as well as his manager were
in hiding, not available for comment.
A source close to Frazier, however,
Heari ng-on Twin
For Mesa Tower
Runs Into Delay
Originally scheduled for tonighl , 1
Costa Mesa Planning Conunission hear-
ing on a proposed twin to the Bethel
NEW YORI(. f UP lJ -Joe Frazier Towers retirement skyscraper won 't be
and Cassius Clay weighed in at tlte considered for at least 30 days.
heaviest of their lives today for their
heavyweight champiomhip bout m Conferences . were scheduled for today
},fadi.son Square Garden tonight. and Wednesday betv.·ee n city off icials
Frazier came in at 20S 4'i pounds, and architec ts representinR' the Western
and he was followed to the scales an Association of Baptists . will fie allowed to hear testimony claimed b h 2 5 hour and G half later y t e 1 · Ma jor problems appear ahead.
by the prosecution to prove lhat Dr. poimd Clay. The religious organ ization is &eeking a
Ebbe Hartelius bribed the man to leave "I'm going to straighten it all out · 't t bu'ld ·d
h. · h .. c•· h d h b I uine exception perm1 o 1 an 1 en· th e state who a11egedly set fire to lS tonig t, wy s oute to t e mo o tical lktory tower at 650 W. l9th St.
Col'"()n-a-de t Mar offices. ----re-por.te.r4 -<Jnd-.hangtr,s..on. --adiRcent ro-St!thellow-ers.-
Judge Jarr.es F . Judge today ruled Built with federal Housing and Urban
for the prosecution in the absence of insisted that the threats were made. Development aid as a nonprofit founda-
the jury after denying a score of motions Also an other report circulated Sunday lion. Bethel Towers has posed a conlro-
by defense attorney Matthew Kurilich, that the City Squire Motor Jnn at Seventh versial problem to local leaders and tax·
most of them motions for a mistrial. Avenue and 52nd Street, Frazier's normal pavcrs.
He ruled th8t the jury must decide New York headquarters, had received Unless new solutions can be found to
If comments allegedly made by the 50· a bo mb threal. old problems -one key poinf in cur-
year-0ld physician to Reba Va ughn, his The same Frazier source said that renl discussions -the Baptist-sponsored
attractive blonde mistress and her the threat was cbeckect out but no bomb project will be more than an architect·
brother, Jim Blevins. rflated to the arson was found. Five hundred special police ural twin to Bethel Towers.
and fraud charges filed against Hartelius. have been assigned to Madison Square Citizens concerned, pro and con, with
Kurllich protested that none of the Garden. the idea of another such fa cility may
statements, some of which were recorded come before the planning comm ission Both Frazier and Muhammad Ali con-• ·1 I! f the h I g I ga· by Newport Beach police, actually in· "-Pn . un es.1 ear n s a 1n
elude Hartelius' admission tha t he was tributed to the cloak·and-Oagger at· postponed.
responsible ror the fire which damaged mospbere surroundifli the projected $.1Ci City councilmen with final authority
his offices at 2.14.5 E. Coast Highway million spectacu1ar when they broke have said they will vote against the new-
last April g, camp Saturday night, came to New York est retirement skvscraper if no method
and immediately went Into hiding. can be found to force payment ol local Newport Beach detective S a m Both were unavailable to newm>en. tax s
(See BARTEUUS, Pa1e !l However. the garruloUJ and outgoing F!d,eral laws authorizing HUD assist·
Ali walked the Manha ttan streets Sunday, ance forbid such payment. shifting the
fSee FIGIIT, Pase Z) (See BETHEL. Page 21
•
ave.s ' , .
•
• 1es
Dune Buggy
Plung~s
Over Cliff
Dangling on a 350-foot canyon cliff,
a Olsta Mesa man held his dune buggy
in place while his wlfe and dauahter
clam9efed out Sunday, then pllinged to
his death on the roc:b below,
Horrified friends who frantically helped
-~titt!e··carw-atc?ififUltplum:
mited upside-down Into a dry creek bed,
crushing the vidim beneath IL
. ·, ~ • . ~I~ lliWf -
BATTALIQN c1111!~ ~D 'LIWIS ci'!~s $MOLDERING RIMAINS
Fire Q.ma91i Form1'r 'Costa C1uhcUm1n'i Nu raer.y' "1 • . .
.
Costa Mesa Nursery Burns
To Ashes in $14,000 Fire
A lire so intfnse its , origin cannot
be determined leveled former Costa
Mesa city c.ouncilman Calvin Barck's
nursery Sunday qight, causing $14,000
damage.
He was granted a council permit a
week ago to close, down his Orange
Coast Nursery, 381> W. Wil spn St, as Bur. glar Loots required by municipal ordinance .
He·at ~nerated b)'. the 10 p.m. blaze
---------ccw=,7,"0so Intense it 6flstered paint on Mesa Residence buildings 10 feet away.
Battalion Chief Ed Lewis said this
A weekend trip to motorcycle ra ce&
in Elsinore proved costly for a Costa
Mesa family, whose home was looted
of more than S2,300 by a burglar,
Arnold Attridge. of 1378 Watson Ave ..
reported the loss to police upon arriving
home at 9;30 p.m. Sunday to find the
assorted jewelry. electric calculator and
television set missing.
Investigators said the burglar reached
through a 'small door a!lowing pet! to
enter and unlocked the residence to
gain entry.
Police said the }ob was. neat and
orderly. with no ransacking, adding the
burglar unscrewed the television' set's
lead wires iruitead of ripping them out
and ignored other valuables.
is not uncommon in cases where a
blaze is well under way before firemen
can begin to extinguish it.
, Location of the outbreak was in a
Workshop area and names quickly raced
to a nearby storage section. Lewis said,
adding the cause is Impossible to
determine.
"It was a very, very. hot, fast fire,"
he said.
''No Indication could be found on the
cause. There 's nothing left but ashes,"
he added.
Chier Lewis said the fire destroyed a metal building housing stored nursery
supplies including · wheelbarrows ahd
assorted fertilizers. ·
He said the latter compounds can
bum with Intense heat. but were not
a primary factor in this particular blaze.
Dead Is Richard B. Floyd.' 35, of 2M
E. 21st St .• whose body was recovered
from lhe remote, rugged terrain ha
Cleveland National Forest several hours
later.
Orange County Sheriff's search and
rescue team members used ropes and
pulleys to haul the mangled body back
to the rugged trail.
Inv~Ugators classed the tragic ac·
cident as a non-motor vehicle fatality,
Sheriff's Sgt Lewis E. Stavenhsger
!!aid the accident oceurred at · 2 p.m.,
but-details-Wera-unavallable....for m.eral
bout!! due to inaccessibility of lhe f rea.
Three hours alone wtre spent recover·
Ing Floyd's corpse.
Recounting the tale of horror, Deputy
Marty Yingling said thne famill<s took
dune. b\lUies to the remote area, neat'
the lntmectlon ol Trabuco and El Cariso lruek trail>. .
One vete.ran rescuer branded the
,. .. kind trek .. terrjbly foolish, due
to bu.ardouf conditions a· n d in-
accessibility.
Deputies said lhe group was enjoying
the e.thilaratJng off-street sport -rid.in&
in line -when Floyd's dune buggy,
in the lead. slithered up to the precipice
in a shower of sand and mud.
Scrambling to the family 's aid , com·
panions helped hold the buggy in place
while Mrs. Lillian Floyd and the couple's
small daughter stepped to safety.
Grim and terrified, Floyd kept his
reel planted firm1y on the brakes.
"But the second he took his f~t off
and tried to escape, the buggy fell,••
said one deputy. "He didn't have a
•chance."
H_is horrified family watched the fatal
plunge, which was placed at about 10
miles northeast of the El Carlso Fire
StaUon, off Ortega l:Dghway.
_Dne oLJb.e._otber_dun~u_wn_
dr iven to the fire station Which dispatch·
ed a truck to the scene and radioed
sheriff's ·deputies from the scene.
Floyd's companions were Identified as
service station owner Jim Tice, Hank
C. Madgin, both of Costa Mesa, and
Marine Rick A. Hugh~·~. of Twentynine
Palms.
Funeral services were pending today.
Pope's Assailant
Insane, Says Expert
MA NILA fAP ) -A psychiatrist
testified Monday that Btnjamin Mendoza ,
accused of trying to kUJ Pope Paul
VJ Lo; insane and cannot distinguish
between right and wrong.
Dr. Rodolfo Laserna was the second
psychiatrist to appear for the defense
to say the Bolivian painter auffer-ed men-
tal disorder, 2 Escape Plane
Crash Injuries
At Meadowlark
• ~Draft Objections Spurned
Firemen had hardly gott'en back to
headquarters from an e!rlier residential
blue when the Orange Coast Nursery
Call came in. ~ ...,
Th~y blartled a hair dryer Igniting
bedroom drapes for the $6,500 fire that
gutted two bedrooms, a hallway and
bsth, destroying ·most of the Larry
K.instlla family 's belonginp.
-Orange
A Costa Mesa student and his
passenger escaped Injury when their
plane crash landed at Meadowlark
AJrport. Huntington Beach. Sunday.
The nose wheel of the four-seat 3$
Bonanza collapsed on ' landing and the
craft's propeller was bent a.od the cowl·
lng damag~ aa the front end hit the
asphalt.
The pilot. William Peterson, 1033
Valencia St, Costa Mesa, and hi.9
passenger, BoMie Ward . were unhurt.
Peterson, a 28-year~ld student at
Orange Coast College, told police that
he had previowily had troub~e Wilh"the
aingk!~ngine plane'• rront landing gear.
The incident ,occurred al 4 'p.m. Randy
Turner, who operates \he airport 'fl'ith
h_is father, Jot\1!_1 Turner, ~id 'tjlat wit· ~a~!l-told him that the pilot made
a hard landing because he was trying
to avoid a kite being flown by youngsters
on He.ii Avenue in the airport'& landing
pattern. Peterson made no mention of
such • probl-m to the pollce
""
, Court Denies Specific Opposition to Vietnam .War
WASHINGTON (UPI l -The So pre me
Court refused today to allow. dr~ftees
to claim conscientious objector status
because or opposiUon to a speclflc war
such as Vietnam. The vote was 8 to
1 with justice William O. Douglas dissen·
ting.
In the majority opinion in two te.st
cases. Justice Thurgood M a r s h a 11
declared that Congress in enacting the
Selective Service Llw Intended to exempt
only persoru "who ·oppose partklpation
in all wars -participation in war In
3'1y form.." , •
Of the argumen(, Ula\ 1 draftee lhould
be_able to single out a partiC'J.iar war
a's grounds for conscientious objklion,
Marshall wrote :
"Persons who object aolely to
pertlcipation in a particular war are
not within the purview of the exempting
JMUoe •''"" I.bough the lalll"" objectio11
may have such roots Ir: a claimant's
conscience and personality that it is
religious in character."
In his dissent, Douglas said of the
majority ruling: "Conscience is
repudiated . . . the court has done
violence to the basic philosophy of the
first amendment and we take a step
backward."
The decisions upheld iower l'Ollrt rul·
!Jigs against two men Who ·refused to
1erve ln Vietnam . •
Guy Porter Glllette-or New York City
'!'"IS' sentenced 1 to two yea~ in prison. rar rtf.Osing to r~rt for induction. Louil
A. Negre of ,B~kerifielJi, Calif .. sought ·
to get out of Uie service after he had
been drafted.
Marshall said that the court was aot
l!uggesting that Congru, could not lta\te
decided to exempt those who oblec:
'"' 11. "''rtic:ular war but was determlnln1
th'ere Was '• "neut.rat, 1ku1ar, jUstiliCa.
tlon" forihe law\U Written.
Jn other major act1ons, the court: ·
-Decided on a tie, 4-4, vote to let
stand a ruling by Maryland's: highest
court that the tontnwerslal Swedish mm,
"I Am Curious (Yehow)''. was obscene.
The tie vote did not set a high court
precedent In law but merely affirmed
tl1e stalA! court.Judgment.
.'-Rtlused lo h<ar·an apptal by alli<ist
Mad.a!Yn Murray', O'llair 'who claimod,
Ult aitronauts on the Apollo a. and Apol1o
11 O~hta tO the mo6n lrilpl'Ojlerty lnj~
rellgtbus Rd ivltles lnto their ope'fj\tlona. ·
-llccllnod for the Ume ~Ina tQ,fl!rlhor.
conafdef" a case challenging l.he practices
or as statts to ·~rmlt greater apeiiding
of ~ mO..y In ,.,ealtl1y lcllool dlstrldl thti~ In 'poor 'On~s. The just~ sent a; ttst caM back' to Florida for further
"""""dlnu.
Chief Lewis said no one was injurtd
In the 5:~ p.m. blaze at .713 Cepter·
St.. since the oc.cui:ianl! • were able tq
nee the premises .•
• "It. wa s •· very fast•movhl:g fire ,'' he
uid, settlnlil'. ·st.ruc;tu.ral .damage al $5.000
and the remainder in clethtllr a;nd other
items.
Aftershock of 4.3
Sw~ys Structures
LOS ANGELES IUP!) -A >harp
afterahOck. from tht ,destructive , Feb.
1 earUiquake Jmed Sou\11<'." eamomia
dtll'.ln1 \he ,11:eekend sw111ng ~·· bu1Jdlrip and shaklnC· WlndOw-s. t · ~
The ,.lln>Otogy \aboratory al the
C.lifomra rnsUtute Ol Technology aaid
the temblor s8turdAy had >a magn)tude
of 4.3 on the Richter Scale and '!fas
1 "normal aftershock."
Weather
• • ' • L •
The fog will roll in along the
coast tonight, givqig way to sunny
11kies on Tuesday, with tempera·
lures ranging from 62 locally to
70 further inland.
INSIDE TOD.\ Y
A fertilizer plant isn't the
proptr place to &um up ~our
nose whtn offered a guided
tour, at least in Huntingiton
Be~c~. Se~ .ttorv.. PaQt 14. ,
'
-=Ii : H IM\W " I M.ittlltl Hw. •1 Clltct)q U• 1 or•111t Ctv111Y 1\
C .. lttfltol U42 , t'INll ,.,.., 1' CtMlo 1, ... u.u
,,,.,_.. 11 • • ... ,.."." .. ,,
DHMI ltttk" II lMlt• 1t
l'1ttr\lol ..... ' ,...,.,, , ' lm.rttl-1' It Wttllltr I
llllltllct •• 11 '#tmt!l't HtW1 1l<IJ ... ...__ ,~ W..-11 ....., ..
AMI 1.tMltrs II
% DAil V PILOT c
Fro• Page 1
BETHEL •.•
added flnanclaJ burden to all other cili·
IW.
Brooks Cavanaugh, aslOciate plaruttt,
said today tblt architect Donald J Ftan
and Baptist leaders have scheduled a
tall: with clly olflcllls Wednaday oo
thtlr propoted towers.
Fears Md City Attorney Roy June
hive already been d.J.scusalng ways to
allow payment of taxes to finance in-
creased sewage, fire protection and other
public service needs it would impose.
C&vanaugb said the city is specifically
concerned about six points, beginning
• with the tax·ba.n Issue.
The effect on se.wu systems in the im-
mediate area if 270 livina units are added
-Bethel Towers has nre vacancies and
a lone waiting list -i.s another consid-
eraUon.
The .Asstmbiles of God-sp:msored facil-
ity constructed beginning lo 196'1 aod
occupied in mld-1961 has been both a
financial problem and a fltt department
headache.
Battalion C'hief F.d Ltwi! said he war
meeting architect Fears today to discuss
the 11ew project and. potenUal fire pro.
' -problem!.
1 "Nothtng major. Just routine" he said.
) lnstallatlon of a fire sprinkler system
and Improved vehicular access for fire
trucks in case the new Baptist tower 11
built are the principal points.
'4 Bethel Towers -at one time the tallest
· building in Oruge County -led local
'· fire.men to develop special techniques
for fighting high.rise structural blazes.
Tbe skyscraper hu eZJ)erienced three
.1 notable blues two requiring widespread
evacuation of residents and the third, on
'Feb. 26 killing a 74-year~ld woman ten-
ant.
"! The latter fire also knocked the pas-
. senger elevator out of aervlce, requiring
flremen to use the freight elevator en .. ute to the HllJ.floor blaze.
_ SJ>«)lllU"" o1 AuembH~ol God con-
strucUon or a second home for persOM
. over 85 and OD fb:ed incomea after BelheJ
Towers was built never materiali7.ed.
. . Conflicll with the city over iaability to
• coo.tribute to the added burden en coet ot
• municipal services and other factors Jed
1 them to drop the idea.
~taliv" of the Anaheim.based
Baptjat coali!ioc took up the project .late
la.st year and claim tbe.y have a way to
get around the sensitive tax problem.
Data prepared by the city plaMlng de-
partment recommends consummation of
a binding agreement relative to such tax
payment prior to any official action on
the permit.
Plans submJtted show the second tower
virtually JdenUcal to the first, also re·
questing reducUon of 3&5 oa-site parking
6paces to 106, since few tenant. own •·1~--: • .-. ......
1 Suit1 have been filed to collect with·
held property tu:es in other cities where
HUD • financed retirement complei:es
have been bWlt, creating problems iden·
tical to Costa Mesa's.
Repreaentatives of Bethel Towers
·maintain they are ready and willing to
pay their share but simply cannot undtt
'the 11w. · ..
Mayor Robert M. Wilson has said -
1 wb.ilo IOIJ4ly supporting the spirit of such
. Jaw-cost senior citizen housing -that he
will block any fn Costa Meaa unless the
tax picture changes.
City olOclala doubt any solution can be
found short of a revlsloo Jn the federal
Jaw.
* * *
-... -· _, .. •
DAILY ,ILOT llltf ,.....
Two Ways to E'ly
On waters of Newport Harbor, all boats seem to be going that·a·way
while in the air above, the Newport Beach police helicopter travels
counterwise. Maybe it all depends .. on which way the winds are
--a·blowin'.--_
Re111e111her Radio?
1 Station Pries Into Blackout
You may have watched America's
utronauts plant Old GIQry on the moon
via borne television but you won't get
similar treabnent for the heralded
"fight.of the Century" from New York
City tonight.
Home television is blacked out this
evening when two prize fighters known
as "Smokin' Joe" Frazier and Muham-
mad "The Mouth" All battle it out
at 7:30 p.m. our time for the undisputed
heavyweight championship of the world.
Radio, too, bas bad 11.s wires chopped
al rings~.
There is one u:cepUon wherein a
round-by-round recap of what's Just hap.
pened will be broadcast from a powerful
hltle multi-watter station situated in
beautiful downtown Burbank.
Statldn KBBQ of Burbank will start
broadcasting pr .. fight dope tonight at
7:05 o'clock and then at 7:30 begin
recapping each round as , Frazier and
Ali go at it in Madison Square Garden.
All this comes about because KBBQ
ls a member of the Mutual Network
which bas a special line in at ringside.
They didn't get it without a court fight
first beiore the real fight.
Admittedly, this isn't going to be the
perfect solution for blacked-out Southern
Californians.
"Our signal is a bit dillicult to pick
up," a KBBQ spokesman admitted to
the DAILY PILOT today. "We have
a sir-tower pattern but we have to
weaken our signal down your way to
protect a Mexican station."
To clarify the technlcal talk, tbe KBBQ
spokesman suggests fight followers can tune them in at 1500 on the AM d.lal
-"Just to the left of KPOL at IMO."
FQI' fight fanatics who just can't
fathom all this, there is alwayi the
closed<ircuit television in the.aters and
auditorlums somewhere near you. Fifteen
bucks a seat for the black-and-white
picture and if you insist on color video,
the seat scale is $25, $20, $15 and $10.
Of course. al those prices you run
the risk one of the principals might
faint during Round 2 or maybe even
during pre-fight instructions.
•
Hut Electio-n _ Tue-sday
.
Big Turnout Seen for Freeway Balloting
By L. 'pEJ'ER KRIEG
Of .. ~ 'lllf illff
J1twpori Beach City Clerk Laura
Laglos today forecast "an extremely
heavy turnout" ln 'I'uesday's Pacific
Cout Freeway election .
Citing the unusually large number or
absentee ballots , already numbering
more than 200, tltrs. Lagios s a i d the
turnout could be •·as high as 40 perceut,"
or nearly 9,500 or Newport's 23,670 eligi-
ble voters. 1 '
The city's 25 polling places will open
at 7 a.m. and close at 7 p.m.
Mrs. Lagios asked voters to t ake
special note of the closing time, pointing
out that it is one hour earlier than
county-administrated elections.
Two propositions are on the ballot.
The first Is an initiative that if adopted,
would "ask" the City Council to rescind
a portion of an agreement with the
* * * * * * Newport Freeway Election
Shrouded by Legal Haze
A legal cloud will hang over the R:!Ults
Df Tuesday'• freeway election in Newport
Beach no matter which way the votes
go.
To help clarify the issues on the ballot,
however, the following will u:plain what
will happen baning any possible court
action.
The first question. the initiative to
rescind the agreement on street closing
along the route through Corona del Mar,
is not binding on the City Council.
If a majority votes •·yes'' on the
Issue, the City Council. probably March
22, will meet' to decide it it should,
in fact, follow the dictates of the elec-
torate and cancel the contract.
AJlhougb ·the Newport council, it.self,
bu supported a "no" vote, if a signifi-
cant majority votes to rescind the agree-
ment, it is e1pected to follow their
wl!hes.
The second question, the City Charter
amendment requiring referendums any
time in the future the council wants
to sign a similar street.closing agree-
ment, must be sent to the California
Legislature for ratification if a majority
votes "yes."
There is, however. no guarantee the
legislature wil l ratify the amendment
because of the significance and con-
troversy surrounding the proposition.
The legal and political implications
of both issues are far-reaching, and
if the measures are carried as an-
Fron• Page 1
HARTELIUS. ••
ticipated, City Attorney Tully Seymour
has forecast the state, as well as private
interest.., may challenge their enactment
in the courts.
On the other hand, should the council
not act on the rescission should it pass
narrowly, the Freeway Fighters could
seek a court directive to force the action.
And if both measurts fail, the Freeway
Fighters can also be expected to persist,
perhaps along legal avenues, to gain
their majot objective -a new Pacific
C-Oast Freeway route through West
Newpo~I. t
~ * * Stat,e Highway
Croup May Study
Traffic Results
The California Highway Commission
will :review the results of the pending
Newport Beach traffic study should the
study show that a modification in the
route of the Pacific Coast Freeway is
desirable.
Fred C. Jennings, chairman of the
Highway Corrunission. said this morning
he has polled the entire board and they
"unanimously" agreed to such a review.
Jennings had to1a-"Mayor Ed Hirth
Feb. 16 he, personally would support
a review, but a Freeway Fighters
spokesman immediately pointed out that
Jennings' "support" would not guarantee
it would take place.
The traffic study, for v.·hi~h the city
council tonight may select a consulting
Amburgey took the wilness stand today firm to perform, is intended to find
to testify that he and a colleague were solutions to the city's traffic problems.
with Blevins when Ml"!. Vaughn's brother and. in_ effect, tell Newport Beach if
telephoned Dr. Harteliu.9 last June IO. Newport Beach needs a freeway , and ·
That conservation, the prosecution where that freeway should go.
State Division of Highways dealing with
city street closings along the route of
the plaMed freeway east or Uppet
Newport Bay through Corona de! Mar.
'l'he second is a Charter amendment
that, pending ratification by the state
legislature. would, if adopted, require
city councils to conduct refert!ndums
at any point in the future that they
want to adopt similar agreements on
the coastal, or any other, freeway ..
The election was forced by the Citliens
Coordinating Committee of the Freeway
Fighters, which late last year met
Charter re!erendun1 requirements by fil·
ing petitions that were signed by more
than 15 percent of the registered voters.
CCC ofricials claimed that nearly 10,000
persons signed the petitions although
Mrs. Lagios verified only the minimum
number or names.
The two-month election campaign has
heated in recent days, to the point where
a former city official who tried to legally
stop the election has said he may sue
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers for making
allegedly slanderous remarks.
Former vice mayor Hans J. Loreni,
who with two former mayors bad unsuc-
cessfully appealed to both Superior Court
and California Supreme Court to slop
the vote, said Thursday Rogers' attack
on him for that action "may justify"
a slander suit.
Rogers had rererred to Lorenz and
former mayors Charles E. Har t and
James B. Stoddard -as "snakes emerging
from an agricultural preserve" in a
talk at an election rally last Monday
night.
In _the cam2ai&!l for a "no'' vole,
the Freeway Fighters have maintained
that a massive negative count would
slop the state's: plans to build the mastal
freeway through the city, or at least
along the adopted route parallel to the
Pacific Coast Highway in West Newport
and south 0£ Fashion Island and along
Fifth Avenue through Corona del Mar.
The anti·freeway campaign has: not
differentiated between the two segments
of the route, although the initiative to
rescind I.he agreement only deals with
the Corona del Mar segment.
Support for a "no" vote on both Issues
has come formally from a five-member
majority of the City Council, which sign-
ed the "yes" ballot arguments, and a
citizens committee beaded by former
mayor's ltr"i. no-reen Mar.Shall and Stod·
dard.
* * * Freeway Voting:
Rea soned View
Versus Radicals
allegu, proves that Hartelius persuaded Vin Jorgensen, a key figure in the
Blevins to set the fire and that he FreeY;ay Fighters was the one who, Newport Beach ~tayor Ed Hirth 1aid
promised Blevins up to $2,000 to flee in effect, called Jennings' promise today the differences in Tuesday's
California. worthless in a talk to the Newport Harbor Pacific Coast Freeway election "are not
Mrs. Vaughn , 27, of Costa Mesa , has Chamber of Commerce Feb. 28. in our city's goals -merely in methods
testified that Hartelius was her lover "Jennings Js only one of seven com· to accomplish them ."
Mesa Planners Facing
Meanwhile !or home television fans,
stations seem uniformly vague on bow
they will cover the Battle of the Cham-
pions.
Spokesmen for channels 2 and 11 say
they will run a printed tape along the
bottoms of their regular program pic-
tures to tell who hit v.·bo when, or
who fell down.
and lived with her for more than three missioners," Jorgensen said. Mayor Hirth and four olher members
years at her home and that she lied Jennings said this morning he polled of lhe city council have called !or a
on bis behalf in earlier municipal court the entire commission, read them his "no" vole in the balloting, urging instead
proceedings. letter to tbe mayor, and 11all concurred." the powers of government be left in
She now alleges that Harte Ii us cr'he letter said: the hands of the council.
Skimpy Agenda Tonight
Folks at channels 4 and 5 think they
may transmit words too. An official
at Channel 7 said it's a little too early
to tell what they'll do -if anything.
authorized the fire to destroy what lhe "It is my understanding that the City Freeway Fighters spokesmen have
prosecution says are •' h I g h I y in· of Newport Beach has undertaken a paigned for a •·yes" vole, mainlai·
crimlnating" patient records that were comprehensive traffic study in connection 11ing "it is lime for radical measures''
scheduled for examination by the state with the Coastal Freeway controversy. to "save our city from the freeway."
board of medical examiners. "I am interested in helping to find Jn, his statement this morning, the
Postponement or a bearing on a con·
troversial twin skyscraper to the city's
existing Bethel Towers leaves-the Cruita
Mesa Planning Commission with a light
agenda tonight.
Several among 10 items remaining on
the schedule for the 7:3G p.m. session
are minor. routine business.
One more significant matter is a public
hearing cooUnued from the last session
on adoption or a revised general plan
ORANGE COASJ
DAILY PILOT
Oii.ANGE COAST ,UI LISHING COMPANY
RoD1rt N. W1td
Pra:0111I 11'1111 PUOll"'"°
J 1clr R. Curl1y
"lk.1 ,~lld..,t •rid G ..... 11 Mln•tll"
lhorn11 IC:11~il
IEdllor
lhol"l11 A. M11rphl11•
Mt n .. 1111 IEClllW
Ch11!11 H. Loe• Rich1rd '· Ni ll Mlt111n; M'""l~t11""1.
CMN M*'• Offtc•
lJO W11t 81., Street
'4t ili11g Ailclr111: P.O. lo• 1560, •262,
Ott..r Offk.s
N..;... 8ttcfi: Jl1' H.-..torf 8elli.¥1,j
~ '"(ti: n:: ,,,,,., ... .._ ~lll'ltlfllt..1 k"1'1: 111rt a.1c1' 8httv•fif
S.11 Clcf'Mnll: l05 Nomi f:I Ctmll'IO RI.II
DAILY ,u .. or ...... """Id! 11 cernlllNd ,,... N~Pr .... It """llhcd t11Hy t•t'flt s-
ift'( Ir! -~•r1tt f(ll ltlont tor Ltfll!'ll 11..:l't.
H,wpor; •ucll. CO.I• """'· l'tvtl•l!!tlor> ltkll. fr-11111 Ytllt't', kft Clt,,...ltf
,.,....,._ •nl $.1 .. ltlludc. •llo!l9 whll -
rtl}OMI Ultlltll. '•llltlptl llf'I"'~ 11t1n1 ft at .Pl WUf llY St,..;. CO.It Mtt•.
• --·~--....._ __ _
of land use.
Planning Director William L Dunn
say.'t-t.ht package prepared by~consultants
Wilsey and Ham patterned on the one
adop ted in 1957 is virtually unchanged.
Constant annual streamlining and .QP-
dating over the years has kept ~e
basic guideline for land use and zoning
in pretty close conformity to city
developmer;it.
So there you have il.-Lighl _fans.
Burbank may be the only answer.
F ro111 P age 1
FIGHT ...
Judge Judge today denied, in a heated a solution to the problem. and if the mayor outlined his personal thinking on
exchange, l\urilic:h's motion that the report as submitted by your consultants the issues:
courtroom should be cleared for the indicates the desirability Of some "'None of us want to see a monstrous
evidenUary hearing. modification in the adopted route, I will freeway cutting through our community.
He rejected the defense lawytr's argu-Support-a review of this-study by the We ail realize-our-growing tralfic pro-
ment that "unfair publicity" was damag-Division of Hlghv;ays lo establish any btems must be solved.
ing his client's case and he also threw· area of concurrence.'' "If you feel that just telling the stale
out Kurilich's motion for a change of The adopted coastal freewa y route we have decided to cancel our freeway
venue . follows the Pacific Coast Highway agreement will solve our problem, then
Judge Judge, obviously angered by through West Newport, and th is is the vote 'yes' on the initiative measure.
Kurilich's further questioning, com· most controversial segment of the route. lf you believe a more constructive ap-The general plan is a guide only.
non·binding, and the new version Is re·
quired under the law in connection with
the Costa Mesa Downtown
Redevelopment program.
mented : "I am not going to be cross The city has continually expressed op-proach would be to devise acceptable
entered coUee shops, chatted and signed examined further on this matter." positio n to this portion, and has not solutions through comprehensive study
autographs for admirers and even paJd He ignored a further question from signed a street-closing agreement with to propose as alternatives, vote •no'
Among other matters up for con·
sideratlon are:
a visit to Madison Square Garden, s~e 1_the __ d_el_ens. __ •_t_lo_rn_e_y_. _______ t_h_•_••_•_le_f_o_r_tha_t_rea_so_n_. _______ •_n_lh_e_f~_s_t_;_te_m_. ______ _
of the fight. . t
-A zone exception permit for Harry
N. Green to construct six residential
units at 431 E. 20th St.. in an R·l
single-family home zone along with an
existing structure.
-A zone exception permit for Harold
L. Van De Walker, of 539 Ham ilton
St.. to build an additional home at that
address with certain setback variations.
-A zone exception permit for Kenneth
A. Mead. operator of the Reef beer
bar, 820 W. 19th SI., to allow additional
oJf·slte parkiitg on adjacent lots.
Teenage Sniper
Kills Self After
Shooting Autos
GREENWATER. Wash. (UPI\ - A
ts.year-old boy who had "nev~r betn
in any 1roublt'' was found lying fa ce
down In Ult snow, killed by one of
two rlnes he had used Sunday to riddle
passing automobiles.
"f c•n't set any reason for it,'' said
\Villiam H. Egnew Sr .. the father of
Threats and rumors for years have
been routine at big heavyweight fights,
most of them regarded as the work
of pranksters and fanatics. Few are
taken seriously.
However. such threats have ac-
celerated since the emergence of All,
the former Cassius Clay, a brash and
controversial figure who has embraced
the Black Muslim faith and refused to
go into military service.
There were numerous such threats
prior to Airs serond heavy"·eight title
fight with -Sonny ListOn Fell. ~-1965
al Lewiston, Maine.
Spectators and newsmen were frisked
and searched at the door. Women·s
purses were opened by security guards.
Ali v.·as protected by a cordon of dark·
suited l\tuslims.
~teanwhile, both Frazier and Ali C(ln-
tinued to issue strong and bitter
statements as fight time neared.
"He·s a loudmouth. he·s a nut, he
appeals to fool s -I will be1t him
in 10," said Frailer of AJI.
7 LA Policemen Hurt
By Barrage of Rocks
the sniper and an inspector for the LOS ANGELES <UPI) -The Grlfnth
Statue Fire Department "He was too Park merry-go-round w11 the scene of a:ood humored .•. too stable.·· violence Sunday when seven poUce of.
Wllllam Herbert Eg:nev.· Jr. pe_rched ficers 'o\'tre h.il by a rock and bottle
ln a "f~le·type•: .crevke atop 1 100-barrage.
foot clUf and began ·spraying .22 callber .. The offlctrs wt:rr writing cltatJons for
rtfle bullets at passing automobll~s on Illegal parking whtn about 100 persons
U.S. 410. At leut 18 vehicles were hi!. described as hipp ie types began the
Including an ambulance which had come. barrage. Officers from flve police dlvl-
io take •way ooe of the four per90ns !ilON were called in to help disptrst the
W'lunded. cro.,.·d of about 2,000 wllicb &athertd • __ ..;, --• ----------
CASH
LOANS
"OLDEST AND EASIEST
WAY TO BORROW''
Borrow from $5 to $I 00, anCI
more, INSTANTl Y. No rod
tapo, no cred;t chech. Al you
need is en item for coD•teral.
NO EXLANA TJON NECESSARY.
AL[ LOANS CONFIDENTIAL
• Fast • Friend~.• Convenient
• CorM. in and see what w.
offer our customers. A new
and unusual experience In
In shop pin 9 enjoyment.
Where people in the know
save money every time they
buy.
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
.COSTA MESA JEWELRv--and LOAN
LOAN, IUT, SIU, TlADE
1838 -NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646-7741 .
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA -lie-Harbor &. Broadway
·-
7
I
7
I
I
• -• -~ ..... -·· ··--• • ---.. ~ • • •• -•
Saddlehaek Today's Final
VOL 64, NO . 57, J SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1971 TEN CENTS
Capo Schoo le Start Program for Handicapped
By PAMELA HALLAN
• ot tM Oallr P'llol 11~1
Children witb cerebral palsy and othl':t
handicaps may have a chance to itl)prove
their ability to function because of a
new class lhal began today.
The Capistrano Unified ~hool District
has. initiated its first program for multi·
handicapped children -a program fully
funi:ied by the state.
"\Ve're starting with two classes which
will progressively involvt 13 children ...
gaid Charles Johannsen, Pupil Personnel
Director.
·•Eventually we'll baye three cluses."
But in th• begij)nlog only • lft chlldno
will be involved with mqre added each
day. This will make it euitr for both
children and partnls to adopt to a new
learning 1ituatiori, a c c o-r d i n g to
Joha0nnsen. And event'lally tbe parents
will fade cut oft.hf scbooJ picturt.
"Most of the children I.Te pre-
schoolers," he ezplained. "Some will be
as ygung as 18 months old."
The ultimate result ol the program
wiU be to help children attain certain
education levela -Jev~ls ·that will perm!\
them to existing dintrict programs.
"Some wilt move into the. educable
ot f,rairiable mentally retarded programs.
Others will enter lht regular school
progrim," said the director.
The' education proceu will be both
physical amt mental. Language develop-
ment, coor4)nation, and communicaUon
will be pursued. 'Two teachers, Mrs.
Mary COndon and Mrs. Barbara Barnes
will s11i)ervise the educaUonal deveWp-
ment or each child, but rpany volunteen
will bt involved.
The temporarj headquarters tor the
• .
program Is Crown Valley School In
Laguna Niguet1 where ther4' are facilities
available for sllch a program.
A final location for portable classroomS
which are being built lO meet' the pro-
gram's 'pes:ial . needs hasn't yet been
decided. '
Johanssen said t h e r e a're' ap-
proximately 45 children that t\a.Ve been
i~ntified with muJU:handjcaps in the
CapL!trano. Laguna Beach and San · Joa-
quin districts. ·
"A few children from Laguna are in·
volved · now but w.e will be Providing
•
education for our own children fln:t
and if there is room for others. Children
from ou'tslde the district will be ·ac-
cepted," he said.
Not all childre:n QU!llify. So~ with
particular hanJicaps, for e11:ample the
blind or deaf, might be better in a
school d!isigned to meet tha' particular
problem. ·
Joh'annsen said children wbo are
autisliC. have cerebral palsy, DO,wns syn.
cir-One (a form of retardatiOn ), brain
damage or gross mol9r coordination )i1n-
dicaps will be eligible to be scr~ned
for the program. Most will have more
than one hand!ccip.
Funding for the program was made
available by the state at be be&inning
of the year. Since few districts had
applied for funding, the deadline for
applications were extended, g i.v Ing
caplstrano enoUgh time to organize a
program.
Th! state provides $50,000 a year a.nd
Johanssen has estimated that the budget
can be kept within the boundaries of
the stipend.
es an e • Ill I un e.
$800 Bill
Dropped
By Designer
By JOHN VALTERZA
Of TIM D•llY ,., .. , SllH
The building designer whose extra bill
!or $800 in added services for the new
:ommunity ,clubhouse was rejected last
week has decided to let the matter
lrop.
Eric Boucher, · who recently drafted
he clubhouse designs, then said he was
l!nt back to the drawing boards for
.tianges in air conditioning systems, said
hat ~espite justification for the extra
:barges, he would not press for payment.
Councilmen last week unanimousJy re·
ected the charges, but Boucher later
:aid the fees were for several days '
\'Ork and redrafting of several · pages
1f the designs on orders from Ma)'ilr
Nailer Evans and consent from City
\'lanager Ken Carr and Patks Sllpt.'
\rlie Waterman.
carr and the Mayor denied having ·
1laced the order.
Specifically, Boucher said. the ~1ayor
tnd se'veral ottier ct>unciltnen questioned
loucher's choice of an electric air con·
litiOning system .
"l had no idea that ~tayor Evan:oi
1·as an expert on air conditioning,"
5oucher said.
The designer added that recent ex·
>eriences with the city-owned golf course
:Jubhouse gas system poinled out pro-
1lems.
"Electric was cheaper according to
ny expert!! on the matter, so I chose
o include it."
Bill Evans asked that the system be
'CplaceO with a gas one as Boucher
1ad originally intended.
.,I didn't have a set of plans with
'as air conditioning on them, so I had ~ sit down and redraft several plates,''
~ucher said, "and l spent a lot of
.ime and effort on the new work. That's
why I sent a late bill."
The designer's original bill for the
:lubhouse design had a celling of $14,000.
ilis fee Js based on a formula of 5.5
:iercent of the total ct>mtruction cost
>f the new clubhouse.
Boucher. whose feuding with Evans
ind members or the city staff has aim·
mered for weeks, said his fees ere
agt exhorbitant end says he believes ~ nls lsoo bfll was juStified. • 9
The council last week hired the
trehitectural firm of Renfro and Jordan
at a fee of eight percent for a fin!
headquarters.
"I don't • why the city is wilting
to pay that hi~ a percentage to a
firm to design a ·simple fitt head·
quarters, when they paid much leu
for our :oiervices on a much more complex
building." he said.
The firehouse designers are not San
Clemente residents .
"I guess the city,'' Boucher said , "gou
by the motto that tf you·re local, then
you're yokel. but if you come from
out of town you're an expert"
Winds of Hurricane ~
Smash Two to Death
ULCINJ, Yugoslavia (AP) -H~·
rlcane wlnds picked up two workmen
'undey , carried them 70 feet and then
11m11shed them down, killing one on the
•P"'-Marinko Nestorovic, 411, 11 father of
five. had his head smashed against 11
utility pole. Asim Fetahovlc. 44, w~s
hospitaliud with serious Injuries.
' ---
-'
FRAZ.IER, LEFT. SAYS HE'S COOL' THEN BOMB SCARE
Muhammad .(II, Ever Confident, Punches Sma.11 819
Security, Tension H"igh
For Title Fight To ·night
NEW· YrORK fUPJ.) -J,ot Frozitr A source cioSe to Fra.Jier. however,
and CossiUI CJ.all. weighed· iA-at the insisted that the threats were made.
heavieSt of th,(ITTtUes today for their -i\lso another repott-cl:rt!Ulated Sunday
heavyweight championship . bout in that the City Squire Motor Inn at Seventh
fi.fadiion SQuare Garden tonight. Avenue.and 52nd StreeL. Frazier's normal
Frazier came in at 205~ ,pound&. New York headquarters, had received
and he ·was foll.owed to the :oicales· an a bomb threat.
hour and a half later· ·btl the 215· The same Frazier source said that
pound Clay. the threat was checked out but no bomb
"I'm going ·to straighten 'it all out was found . Five hundred special police
ton.ight," Cl.all s.ltoutt'd 'to 1the niob of have been assigned to Madison Square
reporters ·and hang~:on . Garden.
Both Frazier and Muhammad All con-
tributed to the cloak-and-dagger at·
mosphere surrounding the projected $30
million spectacuJar when they broke
camp Saturday night, came to New York
and immediately went into hiding.
NEW YORK (AP) -A vague bo111b
scare, a repcrted threat on Joe Frazjer'1
life and tightened security meuurts ad·
ded to the theatrical atmosphere a:oi
tension mounted for t o n l & b t ' s
heavyweight titlt fight between Frazier
and Muhammad Ali (See sport.. Page
23). • ~ . •
BOth were unavailable lO newsmen.
However, the garrulous and outgoing
Ali walked the Manhattan streeu Sunday.
entered coffee shops, chatted and signed
ai.Jtogi'iphs for admii'ers and even paid
a visit to Madison Square Garden, scene
of the fight.
Bond Cost
Per Year
Said$6.56
, __
Dune Buggy
Falls With
Brakes· Off
bangling on a 35(}-foot canyon cliff,
1 Costa Mesa m~n held ~is dune buggy
in place while his wife and daughter
clambered out Sunday, then plunged to
his death on the rock! be low.
Il San Clemente's voters approve all
four of the parks and recreation bond
items oil the April . fO baJlot, the cost
to Ml average homeonwer ·would run
$6.56 a year lO 'PAY back the debt.
Jn detailed infonnation on all , four
ballot' items, city starf this week pointed
out iptcific 00.ts-Of bond ,.redemption
anol·IOletiil'over>e-.year pe;!o<f! i
Horrified friends who frantically hel~
steady the little car watched as It plum-
mit.ea upside.down into a dry creek bed,
'·.; '.• •'WJ:t•lzl•~•-i+! crushing the victim beneath it.
' • ' t ' ' Dead is RJchanLB. Floyd, 35. of .258 The average percentage for the bond
lnte'fest:w001d run about 5.5 percent. Actress Jane Fonda tells new; E. 21st St.. Whose body was recovered
conference "civil disobedience"..... from the remote. rugged ' terrain 'in ltem·6>'·item, ·the specifics of the bond
Issues and' their 'coal! to the owner
of a $211,000 home (assessed value : f7 ,000)
would be :
Is needed as she announces~ Cleveland National Forest several boun:
May anti-war offensive to close later.
~For Proposition A, the new, $400,000
comtnunity clubhouse replacement at 100
Calle Sevllle. the cost in fiseal year
l9it-''?2 would be $2.6.1 lO the average
taxpayer:
-For the costs o( Proposition B, cover-
ing a $350,000 replacement to the city's
Beach Club used for youth recreation
activities. the payback cost 'to the
average tazpayer would be $130 per
year.
-:-E'or .Proposition .C, the $140,000 Item
covering costs for development of public
n e ighborhood parks-including com·
pletion of haJf.finished ones, the cost
per averaa:e ·tiome owner wotild be 92
nation's capital. See story on
Page seven.
Police Capture
10 Aliens
At · Bus· D~pot ..
San Clemente· Police Chief Clifford
cents a year . Murray interrupted breakfast this morn-
Tbe.Jinal b.allo! Jt~. ~itio!L__ ing ti> J ead in the .arree:L oJ_ 10 aliens
D. allowing for improvement of public who had been pursued up the Sin Diego
beach access and facilities (including · . some moderate improvements at the Freeway by Border Patrol agenl.!I.
decaying pier entrance) the cost would The arrests of the seven men and
run 71 cents per year. three women at the Greyhound bus depot
City Manager Ken Carr said that the In San Clemente took place 1bortly , aft~r
exact costs · per tazpayer are slightly
vatiable and are based on estimates 8 a.m.
of assessed .valuation which are a:oi ac· Border Patrolmen said two cabsful
curate as humanly poSl'lible . of Mexican'' nationals were Initially notic-
The fig-Jres quoted for the next fiscal ed near the checkpoint below san· Onofre.
year, he added, would amount to pro-The car stop operation was not active,
bably the highest during the 30-year however.
payback period for the bonds. . Thus 1ar the entire bond issue-which The agents gave chase to the two
shares the ballot with trustee candidate! cabs which had rfiore th•n. I mile
for the Capistrano Unified , and Sad-headstart, then summoned htlp .ahead
d\eb1ck Community College districts-in San Clemente.
has received the endorsement of direc· At .aQout 8:15 a.m. Murray said he
tors of the San Clement! Chamber of noticed three men waiting near the .1ta· Commerce, the San Clemente Jaycees and sevt;al other city groups. tlon, th~n became C\lrioua as 1 blue
sedan arri~ed. '
Orange County . Sheriff's search a.nd
rescue team member!! used ropes and
puUeys to haul . the mangled body back
to .the rugged trail.
Investigators clas.sed the tragic ac-
cident as a non-inotor vehicle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewi:oi E. Stavenbager
said the accide nt occurred at 2 p.m.,
•bu t' details were unaVailable for several
hours due to inaccessibility of the ·area.
Three hours alblle were spent recover-
lna: Floyd's corpse.
Recounting the tale of horror. Deputy
Marty Yingling said three families too k
dune buggies to lhe remote area, near
the intersection of Trabuco and El Cariso
truck trails.
One veteran rescuer branded the
weekend-trek as-terribly foolish.---due
to hazardous conditions a n d in·
accessibility.
Deputies said tpe group was enjoying
the e'hilarating off·slreet sport -riding
in line -when Floyd's dune buggy,
in the lead , slithtred up to the precipice
in a shower of sand and mud.
Scrambling to the famlly's aid, com-
panions helped hold the buggy in place
while Mrs. Lillian Floyd and the couple's
:oimall daughter stepped to aafety.
Grim and terrified. Floyd kept his
feet Planted firmly on the brakes.
"But the second ·he took his feet off
and tried to escape. the buggy fell,"
said one deputy. "He didn't have a
chance."
His horrified famlly watched the fatal
plunge, which was placed at about 10
miles northeast or the El Cariso Fire
Station, off Ortega Hlghway.
One of th~ other dune buggies was
driven to the flre station which dispatch-·
Eight ~ves were nid to be
guarlfing Frflier and• hii manager.
Yancey Durham, .after the 'heavyweight
champion l'!portedly rece ived, a letter
and , later 1n anonymous telep'hofte call
11Jreateninl 1111 Ille il ho dlil not thr<!W' the fipl. . . ·.
Fruier as well as his manag'tr we~e
ln hittini, not available for cOmment.
Threats and rumors for years have be<~ rou)lne a\ big h<avyweight-figbu. ~ '·lilnocific w a~· most of them regarded as the work J:-'f'~
of prankster1-and-fanatics. few are
"-s the three men jumped lnlO U!e ed a truck lo the scene and · radlotd
Ml<! .. ·~ria>: blocked U\eir exit with lher_~'s .deputteaJrom the.scent.
his sfation wagon f nd c~lled . !Qr.-:;-..:·.:.· ..;.."-"---=~~-'--"-"~--~
taken seriously. Objection Nixed
Satldleback Trustee-s -Tall{
• OnSummer:.Boi1dElection
Technical issue1 -lnchxlinl discUUlon
of a specific eJection date -.Will launch
tke meeting tonight of . Saddleback
College trustees who have agreed to
call lcir a 12U·m11Uon bond """ thlJ
svm~~·
Collete S..perintende~t.f'l'faident Dr.
Fred 8.J!uiW wlJ!..Qllqlne the aelectlon of an elet.Uorl elite ror J}'H!\ huge revenue
iuue, • ~llUvely act for tomttlme In
June.
lf the revenue Item rtttlves the
11e<e3WJ t,...lhlrds majority vote, the
fund would 111ur-e cor111truct.1on of the
coUege'1 permanent facllltles up to the
year 1975 and allow for the purchase
\
of a site for a &eeond campus in the
TUstin area .
One prime reaMn for the bond Issue
la doubt in minds of trustees and ad~
ministrators that ajgnificailt atate aid
for construction of Saddleback facilities
is forthcoming . .
AmolJl! the buildings proposed ror lh•
200-acte ).llasJQn V.lejo campus whicll
"'tOU!d be financed through the bonds
would be a ICience·mathemaUct building
a.nd a fine art.a building master planned
for construction in 1972-'7); a gym-
na!lum, ~sic&J tducation comP'1 and
administration buildin1 In 1973-'74 •nd
technology ind scit:nt!I! c I at 1 r o o m
bulldlng1 In 197~ "71. .
WASHINGTON (U Pi l -The Supreme
Court refused today to allow draftees
to claim conscienttous . objector ·statua
because pf opposition. to l specific wa~
such as Vietnam .• The vote. was 8 .to
J with Justict Wllllam O. Douglas di3sen·
Ung.
In the majority ,opinion in' two test
casts. Jmtlce Thurgood M a r s h a I I
deoJared th1\ Congress !(I enacting the
Selective Service Llw .intended to exempt
only persons "who oppose participation
in all wars -partJcipatton in war. In
any fonn.'' , ,
Of the argument that a draftee should ~ able ti) single ·out a partjcular war
aS: gi;o_.unda for conscll!fltlous qbjectlon,
Marshall· wrote:
"PtrsonJ who , object eolely Io
parUclpa.tlon tn a particular war are
not w'ltbln the puniew of the exempting
Aectlon ave.n \hough the latter objfctlon
may have such roots in a claimant'.•
conscience and personality that it Is
rtligiow in character."
usistance from patrolman.
The 10 illegal entrants will be returned
to MeXko, Border patrolmen said.
The cab drivers, who 'hed driven the
aliens tipco&st from San Diego,· we're
not held;·offlctn said.
Secret' Service
' . '
Talk Scheduled
Re$.ident Secret , Service Agent Ken
lcavoni, attached to the Western White
House, will discuss aspect. ol Preslden·
tial secufiW Wednesday far the general
, ~mberth1p\ of •the Capt.strano ~ch
Chamber of .Commerce. ,
Coast
Weadter
The fog will roll in along the
coasl tonight, giving way lo sunny
skies on Tuesday, with temj>era·
tures ranging from &Z locally lO
70 furthtt inland.
· INSWE TODAY
A f•rl.t1iter pla?i:t isn't th1
proper place to turn up t1our
nose whe'n offered a au.idl!d
tour. ot leo.s& '" Hun &ington
.Beach. Ste stor~. Page ·14. '
' J~avonl._ on J1ermanent a~\gnrpent ~~-~~"J:
the San Clemente detlil, will discuss: cPleiitn!1 u, " • , ..... " Ml!Mtl frMwt W '
'cl"'tM!eif "Precautionary Proceedure on Security C9ftlln
for the President and, his F1mily," 1'be <.........,
talk will be ' dW'ing lhe monUy noon ~i.rtt1-~
luncheon meeting of the chamber at ••"•""'-'
Pete and C11r11'1 Restaura{ll ln San Juan ~="
Capistrano. Chamber members and w L•llflf1
guesu are wtlcomt.
,.
....
" " " • " .... .. ..
OI'-Ct11~1't It IYl'M hf'ltr 21 ...,.. , .. u
SMdl ~etl »t1 '
T._.,IMll ''' T .... ~ 1' ..... "*' • '#tl!IWt ..... 1S.11 "''"' ....... ...
------' ,_ -··-... ----I --'
I
••
N. Viets-in Trouble? Reward Set
Red Chinese Premier Takes Myst,ery Trip
At$100,000
For Blast LONDON (UPI) -Ncrth Vietnam
: disclosed today lhat Chlnese Communist
:.Premier Chou En-Jal had just visited
-Hanoi in connection with "U.S. ag-
gression." Diplomats said the visit meant
• Hanoi is In trouble and wants help.
: Fir.It diplomatic assessments -0f the
: unexpecle(t vl!lt $aid Peking in turn
... ls determined not to allow the Hanoi
.. regime to be de[eated militarily or to
.. be weakened to the point of political
.. crisis.
The dlplomatlc auessment said the
Cbou visit reflected the apparent success
, of the current U.S.-backed South Viet-1 namese operation in Laos again!t the
• Ho Chi P.tinh Trail.
1be high level of the Chinese mission,
11.! composition, the time of the visit
and not least the fact that Hanoi asked
for the Chinese leaden all point lo
new development cf crisis proportions,
the assessment said. 1
Jwt what Hanoi wants and what Pek·
Ing ls ready to give remains a matter
for speculation at this early stage of
the Sino-Vietnamese get-together. Peking
all along has wged Hanoi to go on
fighting to victory.
Nor was It ruled ()Ut that a similarly
composed Soviet mission might go to
Hanoi -or, allemaUvely, that top level
talks might be intiated in Moscow.
Anything less than that would mark
a clear shift by Hanoi to Pelting, at
Oeeanside Arrest
the -al Mooco ... DI~ versed i. Far Eamrn 11·
lairs had Ultle doubt the Vletn1ln war
is entering a new, crucial atage with
as yet unpredictable consequences.
Chou has not left China for IJve years
or more. He quieUy dropped plans for
a visit to Africa last year.
Diplomatic sources noted that among
those accompanying him are not only
top party chiefs but also the d e p u t y
chief of staH of the Chinese army.
The Hungarian news agency MTI
quoted ''Peking observers'' as saying
Chou's journey and hls talks in HaMi
"came after the Chinese government
declared it will take every measure
to provide support to the peoples cf
Jndcchina and will not allow the
Americw to do with those peoples a:s
they please."
MTl said the official Peking newspaper
Peoples Daily published a commentary
today warning that "the American acts
cf aggressicn bear a threat ta China,
which wili nat remain incUfferent." It re-ported a "sympathy demonstration or
millions" in favcr cf Chinese govern-
ment policy •
Pelting has issued a series of sharply
worded official Chinese government
statements condemning U.S. activities
in Indochina and stating it would not
stand id1y by but has made no specific
Marine Suspect Hunted
In Laguna Theft Seized
Laguna Beach detectives were Inform-
ed today that a Marine believed to
have been involved in a $4,000 robbery
in the Art Colony had been arrested
in Oceanside. He was not immediately
identified.
Police sald the Marine and two ac·
complices allegedly tricked a Laguna
Beach man into letting them into his
home and then robbed him of all his
belongings. The victim of the robbery
was identified as Darryl Joseph Deayn,
of 585 Park Ave.
Officers said Deayn became acquainted
with hte serviceman about two weeks
ago after giving him a ride. The two
Deckhand Seized
After Speargun
Robbery, Kidnap
A teenager who said he was Alaska·
bound, but got only as far as a Newport
Beach sportfishing dock was arrested
today In the kidnap-rcbbery cf a waiter
abducted at speargun-point.
Investigators said the l&-year-0ld
suspect made the mistake cf revealing
to his victim where he worked as a
deckhand.
Marlin L Dart, cf 2030% Harbor
Boulevard, Costa Afesa, called police
after be was released unharmed at
Delaney's Sea Shanty restaurant, near
Davey's Locker.
Investigators contacted the sportfi.!hing
and e:1cun1ion boat firm, questioning
them abaut the possible suspect.
'The Long Beach youth was taken into
custody and admitted to Orange County
Juvenile Hall. pending determination of
charges to be brought against him.
Dart told police he picked up the
boy while hitch-hilting at 3:30 a.m. and
was invited into bis motel room at
1977 Newpcrt Blvd., C-Osta Mesa.
DAllY PILOT
OllANG';S: COASf L'UILmtlNO COMPANY
••Mr+ H. WeH ,,....,, ..............
Jee.• I.. Cvrley
Vkl ,ruldMt allll CO-el M--
1'11e"'11 1e •• ,n ......
TltoP11e1 A. M111n1\l110
M.,,._kW IElliWr
CS.etf" H. LH. 1Jdt1r4 P. Ntll
".U'!._"111:,.Mtpito"'8 Idl~ _ i..t----22! F.r .. t Ave11uo
S.. C'-9 Offke
J05 No'!" El C1111i~• l.111
"""' ....... Col .. MMI: Ja Well 11., Slrwt
H""""'1 '"'"" Im HtwPOrt lavlw8~ ti11nll .. tM 81Klll 1117J ... di 8ov11Yt ttl
OA.tl Y ,-1~0T, ..-•ldl Ii ~ M flf~ ..... "*"'"""' • .,., •ce.M ._ •• ., Ill .... ,.,. eflti.. .... ~ hldl.
l'lfWllWI ... di. C:0.11 .,,_., H1t11llflPM
!Md\. ~ltln Vtllef, IM ~ c..i.ir-ef'lll ~lttlpdl,, ...... """"' -, ...... ., _,._, """"~ ,,....... ..... b ••. »II w.t ..., llt'•~. Cllhl ~
Telt•t a· 1714l MZ-4JJf a_,., A4•'1 I 1 MZ.16?t
S... ~ Al DlpoT-ltt
, ••••••• 4""44•
i..,w ... Al • .,.,. ......
,,, •• , .... ,...... a
C~t, ltn, ore. CMtl ~ c-. ... .,. "" -,,.,.., 111 .. ....-..
lllllW•I ""'*" ffl' td•trtl-'-...,. _., Ito , ...... ~l,IUll •ltM!ttt llljlll(... ,..
...... ., Cflllt'l'llN ...... .
._.,, ''"' ,..,... ,. ... ,, ,......,. tttdi
.... C.0.11 MIM, C•lil'll'Ne. ~ w cerrllr u ,n "'*ltl'l.111 w _,. •.n _.,.,, 111Jfft1ry .._1111911••• U.tt ..-tltN.
became friends, police said, and Deayn
gave the Marine b.ls phone number.
Polici! aa:ld Deayn received a call from
the Marine Friday evening, asking for
a ride from the bus station, and Deayn
went to pick the man up. The two re~
turned to Deayn'1 home and, with a third
man, were watching television 'When
someone knocked on the door.
Officers said the Marine then allegedly
drew a pistal on the two and opened
the door for the caller!. The trio alleled-
ly tied up Deayn and his unidentified
companion and began a room-by-room
search of the heme, taking all Jtems
cf value. The loot included jewelry, a
stereo, credit cards and a pay check
for $197, all totally valued at M,294,
officers said.
Laguna Beach detectives are ex:pected
to go to Oceanside today to take cu,,tody
cf lbe suspect.
Abbie Cardiel's
Services Held;
Pioneer's Widow
Funeral services were held Friday in
Saddleback :fi.1ortuary. Chapel for Abbie
Cardiel, 23 Monarch Bay, South Laguna,
who died March 2 In South C-Oast C-Om·
munity Hospital al the age of 77.
:ri.trs. Cardiel was the widow of the
late Alejandro Cardiel, Orange C-Ounty
pioneer who was a rancher with Edward
Utt, father oJ' the late Rep. James Utt.
The Cardlels were the parents cf 1 t
Cbil<iren, aUDOrilln the oliJUtt f8.mily
home which they purchased when the
Ulla moved to Lemon Heights.
Born in Tu!tin and a lifelong resident
of Orange County, Mrs. Cardiel had
lived. with her daughter, Elinore Greene
of South Laguna, for the past four
months. She had many friends In the
area and was known for her devotion
to flowers, animals and birds.
Mrs . Cardiel is survived by eight
daughters, Priscilla Hoodenpyle o f
Palmdale ; Aurora Herrera of Los
Angeles; Ruby Aguliar of Anaheim;
Deonisia Kicilinsci of Temple C i t y :
Emerald Trillo of Los Angeles: Gloria
Pomeroy of Downey; Diane Compton
of Downey; and Mrs. Greene of South
Laguna; three sons, Antonio Cardiel (){
Palmdale; Eleazer Cardiel of Arcadia :
and Ale:1ander Cardiel of Tustin; and
by 26 grandcltildren and 2S great
grandchildren.
The Rev. Joseph Stevens of San
Clemente Presbyterian Church officiated
at the Friday services Which were follow-
ed by burial at Fairhaven ?i-femorlal
Park.
Forming Police
Unit Study Set
A feasibility study which recommends
the immediate formation cf a police
department in San Juan CaplJtrana will
be presented to the city council at
tonight's 7 p.m. meeting.
The study, prepartd by Ri chard C.
Grace special consultant in the field
or police science, has been completed
and dittributed to each cooncihnan. The
consul ant. wUI be 1vallable March 1 l
for a qutltlon and answtr stulon.
The llndlngs of a committee tludylng
the Jusibillty of annexing C1plstrano
Buch and Dllll Point •lso wUl be
dllCUued. The city staff has prepared
a report listing both 1dv1ntaaes and
dl.ladv1ntaae1 of annclina an art• twice
Its 11 .. In ~aUon.
The anneutlon study· w11 requested
by the chamber• of commerce ol both
communiUes.
th1<1t lo Hild troops lo Honol'a aid.
Hanoi rodlo lodly broldcul 1 Ill~
ment by lhe patrloUc front al Looi
warning the United States that If U.S.
infantrymen enter Laos "the entire re·
spansibility for the dangerous coruiequen-
ces arising from this adventuristlc act
will rest with the Nixon administration.''
Meanwhile. in Paris chief Hanoi
negotiator Xuan Thuy told a group cf
American pacifist.. that he had resumed
the long suspended secret peace negotla~
lions with President Nixon's chief peace
negotiator. a spokesman for the paclfist
group said today.
Stan Dale cf Chicago, a newsman
for radio station WDAI in the Chicago
area, said Xuan Thuy made the
disclosure during a meeting with some
of the J70 American pacifi.!ls currently
in Paris for meeting with the delegates
to the Paris peace talks.
''Xuan Thuy told us he had met
privately with Ambassador (David K.
E.) Bruce several times," Dale told
newsmen at a news conference called
by the pacifist groups from the
American Friends Service Committee,
clergy and laymen concerned, and the
fellowship of reconciliation. •
The remai-k was the first indication
that secret negotiaticns between the
United States and North Vietnam had
been resumed.
Two Teen Girls
Critical After
Cycle Accidents
Two teenaged girls who suffered head
injuries in separate motorcycle accidents
in Laguna Buch Friday night. remain
in critical cohdition in South Coast Com-
munity Hospital today.
Brenda Jones, J9, of 5405 Bruce Cres-
cent, Newport Beach and Victoria
Hopkin, 18, cf Phoenix, Ariz. have been
in the hospital's in tensive care unit since
the accidents, according to a hospital
r;pokesmen.
Steven Lawrence Curry, 15, cf the
Newport Beach address, operator of the
cycle on which Miss Jones was a passen-
ger, was killed in the first accident which
occurred at 10:50 p.m. Friday on Park
Avenue near Thurston Intermediate
School.
Miss Hcpkin was injured about ha 1 f
an hour later when the motorcycle on
which she waa a passenger crashed in
the 1500 block of Temple Hills Drive.
Gary Edward Kropenlck, 3198 Alta
Laguna Blvd.. aperat.or cf the cycle
involved in the second accident, escaped
with minor injuries.
Police said that none of the four vie·
tirm was wearing a safety helmet and
a coroner's investigator said the dead
man "would have had a iood chance
of surviving'' had he worn a helmet.
The fir st accident occurred when CWT)'
apparently lost control of his cycle on
the steep Park Avenue Hill and swerved
into the hillside.
The second couple stopped to view
the crash scene and were warned by
ofricers against riding at high speed
wilhout crash helmets. Pc\ice claim they
sped off on their bike, only to crash
moments later on a nearby hill.
Want Fight Info?
Better Check
Tuesday's Paper
•• •
. •
•
' OAll.'I' I'll.OT Stt lt l'MM
Here's Looking at Y 011
On a clear day you can see Jeff Cabral. U you are Venus Ochoa.
Like a lot of other people, Jeff, 6, and Venus, 10, both of Stanton,
took advantage of the warm weekend weather. They had fun in the
sun at Corona del Mar State Beach.
SA Fireman Saves Ape
In Lion Country Safari
A Santa Ana fireman who jumped into
the sea Hon pond at Llon Country Safari
Sunday to rescue a drowning baby giblXIJ't
ape is credited with saving the
youngster's life.
Officials at the Laguna Hills animal
preserve said Raymond E. Kawalchuk,
37, was watching the antics of the sea
lions when he spotted the little ape
which apparently had tumbled irito the
water while playing on an island in
the center o( the pond.
Stripping off his shirt a!}lVS'hoes
Kowalchuk climbed the fence and plung-
4 Extra Inches
To Cost $8,000
ed Into the pond, which Is about four
feet deep, to pluck out the unconscious
victim.
It was identified as a year-0ld simiang,
a breed of gibbon ape, about two feet
tall and weighing 15 pounds.
While onlookers cheered, Kowalchuk
rushed the little ape to the Lion Country
animal nursery where a team or vets
worked to revive it.
The simiang was held for observation
in the nursery for a, couple cf hours,
then returned to its island home , ap-
parently none the worse for lts ad-
venture.
The sea lions, according to Lion Coun-
try officials, apparently Ignored the en·
Ure drama, Apes never go into water
voluntarily, they noted. and the baby
undoubtedly tumbled in by accident while
it was cavorting on the bank.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional
leaders SMounced today a $100,000
reward for inrormation leading ta the
arrest and conviction or the person or
persons responsible for the bombing of
the Senate wing of the Capitol one week
ago.
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
said the reward money was posted by
private donors whom he would not iden·
!Uy.
Scott and Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield said the donors volun•
teered to put up the mooey which hat
been placed. in escrow in a bank.
Mansfield said the bank cou1d not bt
Identified., either.
The reward was aMounced after House
and Senate leaders met to discuss securi·
ty of the Capitol.
Mansfield said they agreed that the
Capitol police force should be made
fully professional, wiUt no mo re
patronage appointments.
Scott said he was not at liberty to
say whether investigators have any hard
leads in their hunt for whoever placed
a bomb in a men's room on the first
floor of the capitol.
The bomb e1ploded in the early morn-
ing hours of March J, causing damage
estimated at $300,000. No one was in·
ju red.
Mansfield and Scott issued a statement
saying "any person or persons providing
infonnation will be fully prctected.
Sources of information will be regarded
as completely confidential." t
They said anyone having tnfonnalion
on lhe bombing should make it available
to any law enforcement agency er of·
ficial , including local offices of the FBL
Their formal statement said congres~
sional leaders "have been advised that
the money has been made available
by private sources."
Scott, Mansfield, House Speaker Carl
t,!~~~t 8~~~!~~id R~~· :o~~ ~~~~c~~
the House majority and minority leaders;
and Sen. Allen Ellender (0.La. ), the
Senate president pro-tern, all signed the
reward announcement. ,
Scott said at the conference on Capitol
security. congressional leaders also
agreed to have police and their sergeants
at arms make new recommendations
on security procedures, including the
hours the building will beopen to th1
public.
Viejo Man Held
By Texas Police
On Pot Charges
SAN ANTONIO Tex. (UPl) -Police
confiscated $1 ,500 worth of marijuana
Supervisors decided extra caution was and arresled three persons, including
worth $8.000 last week y,·hen Supervisor Seu.bu Diver a ri.ussion Viejo man, Sunday en a
Ronald Caspers challenged a decision highway east of San Antonio. or a~ago to place pickets closer Texas highway patrolmen J a r I e 1
together the Dana Point Quay Wall Bel;eved Dead Fielding and Don Thompson curbed a• ban · " automobile which sped through their
The }O estimated to cost $269.09'2 radar trap. The officers said the three
was upped lo $277,092 when the board A scuba diver miu.ing off Catalina persons inside-the car began actlng
\'oted to have the· pickets five inches Island Sunday Is presumed drowned to--suspiciously so Fielding and Thompson
apart instead cf nine inches. day and the Coast Guard search has searched the vehicle. Their search turned
Caspers, absent last week when the been called off. up, they claim. l&-One·pound packets tf
decl.!1lon was made said he had ex-The diver, identified as Dennis Holpes high grade marijuana valued a! $1,500.
You may have watched America's perimented with small children and of Downey, left the private boat Esceria The three were charged with posses·
astronauts plant Old Glory ()n the moon spaces between pickets and thought nine with enough for about an hour's dive sion of marijuana and jailed. Additional
via home television but you won 't get inches was safe. Sunday morning. but failed to rtturn. charges y,·ere expected to be Hied today.
similar treatment for the heralded There are 2.6 miles of guay wall A Coast Guard spokesman said a The th ree v.·ere identified as. Elmer
"Fight of the Century" from New York handrails and 69,106 square feet of con· search was conducted from Bird Rock Dwayne Harper. 22. of Atlanta, Ga.:
City tonight. crete walkways in the Dana Harbor to the v.·est end of the island until Danny Knight , 20, of Auburn. Ga.; and
Home television is blacked cut this project. darkness forced searchers lo give up. James Berosby, 22, of Mission Viejo.
evening when two prile fighters known 1-'--'-----------------------=--'--------°'--'------'---
as "Smokin' Joe" Frazier and Muham-
mad "The Mouth'' Ali battle it out
at 7:30 p.m. our time for the undisputed
_ heavyweight championship of tht world.
Radio, too, has bad its wires chopped
at rings\~.
There is one e:1ception wherein a
round-by-round recap of what's just hap-
pened will be broadcast from a powerful
little multi-watter staticn situated in
beauUful downtown Burbank.
Stalion KBBQ cf Burbank will start
broadcasting pre-fight dope tonight at
7:05 o'clock and then at 7:~ begin
recapping each round as Fr11ier and
Ali go at it in Madison Square Garden.
All this comes about because KBBQ
Is a member of the Mutual Network
\vh ich has a special line in at ringside.
They dldn 't get it without a court flgbl
flrst before the real fight.
Admittedly, this isn't going to be the
perfect solution for blacked-out Southern
Callforol1ns.
"Our signal ls a bit difficult to pick
up," a .KBBQ spokesman admitted to
the DA1LY PILOT today. "We have
a six-tov•er pattern but \\·e have to
\\'taken our signal down your way to
protect a 1ile1ican slatlon."
To clarify the technkal talk, the KBBQ
spbkesman suggests fight follcwer1 can
lune them in at 1500 on the A~f · dla1
-"just to the left of KPOL at 1S40."
For fight fanatics who j111l can't
fathom all this, there is always the
closed-circuit television In theaters and
audltoriu~ somewhere near you. Ftfteen
bucks .... ' s!at for the black-and-white
picture and If you insist on ct1lor vid6o,
the 1e.11t scale Is $25, $20, $15 and $10.
Of COUrM!, al those prfCel YOU run
the risk cne of the principals miaht
fai nt during Round 2 or maybe even
durlna pre-IJght ln.slructlons.
CASH
LOANS,
~
"OLDEST AND EASIEST
WAY TO BORROW"
Borrow from $5 to $I 00, anCl
more , INSTANTLY. No red
tape, no credit checks. All you
need is en item for collateral.
NO EXLANATION NECESSARY.
ALr LOANS CONFIDENTIAL
• Fast • Friendly • Convenient
• Come in and see wliat we
offer our customers. A new
and unusual experience 111
in 5 h o p p i n g enjoyment.
Where people in the know
!ICIYe money every time they
buy.
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FllOM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRv·-and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SILL, ruDr
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· • PHONE 646-7741
DOWNTOWN COSTA MESA-Bot-• H•rbor & Bro1dw•y
'
l
(
I
7
I •. I" I----------------~---.---. ...a-I ··-----_......._ ' •
\
7
ij
' ' . i ' ' . (
•
•
Lago11a ·Beaeh
EDIT I ON
Today's Fbaal
N.Y. St.ock.1
VOL. 64, NO. 57, 3 SECTIONS, 32 PAGES , QRANGE CQUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 8, 197.1 TEN CENTS ..
Mesa Driver S~ves Family, Plunge·s to ,Death
Dangling on a 350-foot canyon cliff.
a Costa Mesa man held his dune buggy
in place while his wife and daughter
clambered out Sunday, then plwiged to
his death on the rocks below.
Horrified friends who·frantically helped
steady the little car watched as it plum·
mit.ed upside.down into a dry creek bed,
crushing the victim beneath it.
Dead is Richard B. Floyd, 35, of 2S8
• Ie
Agent Hit
With Rock
On Beach
Laguna Beach narco!ics officers have
been get ting more than a suntan at
Cleo Street beach lately.
Saturday afternoon, detectives Neil
Purcell and John Saporito were making
an arrest on the beach wnen a 16-year-cld
bystander started shouting ob!Cenities
and allegedly began throwing rocks at
the officers. Poli ce. claim one of the
stones hit Saporito in the shoulder and
the youngster was arrested on suspicion
of assaulting a police officer. .
Authorities said the boy. who was
turned over to his parents1 has a record
of previous arrests. •
The incident was the tthird act of
aggre ssion against the two policemen
to occur near the beach recently. Last
week, an unmarked patrol car assigned
to the two detectives had its windshield
smashed with a board while parked
near the beach. The same day Saporito
was assaulted while taking pictures on
the beach. Despite the slight diversion Saturday,
the two detectives arrested Linda
Wahana Vellu tini, 19. of 475 N. Coast
Highway. Police claim three balloons
fill'ed wlth heroin were confiscated when
she was taken into custody. Miss
Vellutini, police said, is to be arraigned
Tuesday at South Orange Cou~ty
Municipal Court on charges ol possession
of dangerous drugs with intent to sell.
Planners Stud y
Major Items
During Meeting
Laguna Beach Planning Commissioners
will begin their examination of the
General Plan report. contin ued discussion
of the PRO (planned residenlia\ develop-
ment) ordinance and look over plaru
for the 1971 Sawdust Festival dur ing
their study session beginning at 7:30
tonight.
Representatives of the Sawdust group,
who waited through a lengthly commis-
sion session last Monday only to learp
the report on their permit request wa\
not com plete, were assured of some
respo nse from the commisSiOll tonight
so they can proceed with plans ror
the summer exhibit.
Commissioners are expected tcr' con·
tinue their study of the PRO proposal
that would permit cluster housing in
hillside developments. A continued Se·
cond hearing on the ordinance Is schedul·
ed for next Monday.
Time permitting. commission chairman
Willia m Lambourne 11as indicated he
would like the planners to "dip into"
the 129-page General Plan document
prepared for the city by Daniel, Mann,
Johnson and Mendenliall during a tWc>
year study.
E. 21st St.. whOSe body wu rec:overed
from the remote , rugged terrain in
Cleveland NatlonaJ Fortst several hours
later.
Orange County Sheriffs iearcli and
rescue team members used ropes aDd
pulleys to haul the mangled body back
to the rugged trail. ·
Investigators classed the tragic •~
cident as a non-motor Vehicle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewis E. Stavenhager
said the accid~nt occumd at 2 p.m.,
but detaib were unavailable ror several
hours due to inacceasibility of the area.
Three hours alone wue spent recover·
. Ing Fl<>yd's corpse.
Recounting Uje tale of horror , Deputy
Marty Yingling ,.Id thtte families look
dune buggies lo the remote area, near
the .intersection of Trabuco and El Cariso
truck .trails.
""'' ........ .F~ZIER, LEF;r, SA.VS HE'S c.OOL: TH.EN BOMB SCA(tE
' Muhlmm•d· All, Evtr Confident, Puncht1·Sri\all 119
. .
Security, Tension High
For Title Fight Tonight
~'EW YORK (APl -A vague bomb
scare. a reported lhre1t on Joe Frazier's
life and tightt~ ·security. musures ad·
decl to the theatrical atmoapbere as
--tension-mcunted1 . for to".rrt g'h t-•-1
heavyweight title fight between Frazier
and Muhammad· Ali (See sports, Page
23).
Eight detectives were 15aid to be
guarding Frailer and his manager.
Yancey Durham, alter the heavyweight
Mr. Hernandez
Funeral Slated
Funeral aenices were held today in
Laguna Beach for Pascual s: Hernandez,
the father of Llguna Boacti restaurant
owner Eduard D. Hwnandez.
Tbe -elder Mr. Hernandez died Friday
at the age of 80. He had lived in
Newport Beach for 12 _years and in
California for 70 years.
His son is the owner of TortiUa Flats
in Lagqna Beach.
Jn addition to his son. Mr. Hernandez
leaves four daughters, Maria H .. While,
of Costa Mesa ; OoroU1y Gandara and
Letha Fisher, both 'or Newport Be•ch,
and Marla Benvides of Lagu!la Niguel. ·
He is also survived by 10 1randchildren
and-22 great'·grandchildren.
•
"To Set Date
champion reportedly rectived a letter
and lat.er an anonymous telephone call
threatening his life il be dkl ·not throw
the fight. •
Frazier as ~nasliiS manager were--
NEW YORK (UPJJ -Joe Frazier
and Cassiu.i Clay weighed in at the
heaviest of their lives today for their
heavyweight cham.pionship bout tn
Mad ison Square Garden tonight ,
Frazier came in at 205 !-i pounds,
and he was followed to the scliles an
hour and a Mlf later by thl 215·
poun.d Clay.
"I'm going to straighten ft all out
tonight," Clay shouted t-0 the mob of
reporters and hangeri-on.
In hiding, not available for camment:
A source close to Fraiier, however,
in11i1ted that tbe threats were'ttl.I~.
Also another report circulated Sunday
that the City Squire Motor Inn at-Seventh
Avenue and S2nd Street, Frazier'• normal
New York headquarter1, had received
a bomb threat.
The same Fruier source said that
the threat was checked out but no bomb
.. wa, Jound. Five hundred special ·police
have been assign ed ... to~ Madison Square
Garden.
'Both Fraiier and Muhainmad All con-
. tributed to the. cloak·a,nd-da1ger at·
· r11osp~ere .surroanding the projected S30
. million Spectacular . when they broke
ca.mp 5,aturdaj .night; Cai:¥ to New York
and tmmediately w'erit into hiding . . ' ... . ..
One veteran rescuer branckd the
weekend trek as terribly foolish . due
to hazardow conditions a n d in-
accessibility.
Deputies Wd the group was enjoyi ng
the exttilai'atirig off-street sport -riding
in line -·1 when Floyd'a dune · buggy,
in the lead, Slithered up to the preclpi«
ln a 1hower of sand and mud.
Scrambling to the family's aid, com·
panloils helped hold the bllfil'. in place
High Rise
Petitinn
Doing Well
Proponents of an initiative to limit
buildln1 height· throughout Laguna Beach
reported ·collecting "more than double''
the ep;ptcted number of signatures in
the first two days of circulation of their
initi11live petition.
An exact count was not availa ble this
morniJ1i, bl!t spokesmen for Vll118e
~· lfkl fh:at '9'eektnd 11gnups .. i ~r.·1~!lff~;,~1t:
they had anticipatld: lStt p l"C tu rt ,
P,;e",iJ.i .1ln :t<~ ,T,JJ. t~c
bulldlnp. l!lii>llahoUJ lb< Ari'. Col .. y, tO
threi ltorlta above .ir1de. JJ.Ild • [eet
above 1rade. II 1ignltur~ of ,1,100
re1istu~ voters · are (>btained On the
while Mrs. Lillian Floyd and the couple'1
small <faughter stepped to safety.
Grim and terrified. Floyd kept hi.a;
feel planted firmly on the brakes.
"But the second he took his feet off
and tried to escape, the buggy fell,"
said one deputy. "Ht didn't have a ··--·· .. Ul411=· ' ••
•His horrified family watched the fatal
plunge, which was placed at about 10
miles northeast of the t i Cartso Fite
era
•
. ..,_
Aetll'iat , , . .
r ..ft' ) ! I .~ • •
Actress Jtne Foni:la te ls news 1
confe renC'e "civil disobedience"
la ueded ,as tllM! 11111ou11Ces 'Mlt y.onti-Mr 6tfotillve It ~se ,
nation·~ .capltil. See •tori' on Page 7.
petitlon11. ·the •cltf council will ,have to
•dopt the j>ropo;ed height limitation Alabama Youth ordl~nce ·or place it befo~e ".Oter1
at a 1peclal election. '-
The petitions again will be presented H Ll b FBJ for •lgning at major marktll Thursday em y
through Sunday from 11 a.m.1to 7 p.m.
Meanwhile a progreu report on a . A f · H • • · k • .
campaign will he given al. town m .. ting . ter i1ac ing
at 8 p.m. Tuesday Ui the women's club,
288 St. Arni's Drive. MIA.Mt l AP) -A U>·year-old· high
'Petitions will be made available . to school sdpbomore today' boarded a Na-
persons wishing to participate i n neighborhood circulation and speakers tion:al • Airlines jeL at Mobile, Ala.,
will be on hal'ld to discuss .the Initiative presented the stewardess 1 pistol in.stead
and answer __guestions. of a licket, and forted the crtw to A regiitrar of=vo"'1-.,~,~,r1so~w~ill~b~e-~n~y~· hi~.m~l~o~M~i~am~i.~where he surrendered
present to register Laguna residents. peacefully.
Only registeffit voters may circulate or sign the iniUative petitions. . . Thomas Kelly Marston waa charged
with aircraft piracy and held by federal
Kathryn Y arick
Services Tuesday
Funeral services .will be held at 9
a.m. Tu·esday for Kathryn M. Varick,
·a SOI.Ith Laguna resident who died Friday
in a Laguna Beach traffic accident.
She was 82.
~ Rosary-will be recited for Mrs. Varick
tonight it 7:30 p.m. at St. Catherine
of SieMa Churc' in Laguna B:eJch. Re~·
qulem mass will also be held at the
church and interment will follow at HoJy
Sepulcher Cemetery.
Mrs. Varick, who lived at 30802 S.
Coast HJghway, b survived by her hus.-
band, Floyd ; three grandsons, Father
Lawrence Kolberg, of Gardena: Anthony
Kolberg of ONnge and James Kolberg
of Laguna ·HUis and six g r e a t,.
grandchildren.
Mrs. Varick died a• a result of in)uries
suffeted lh an 8 a.m. accident Friday
in . "Yhlch her husband's auto went out
of control and flipped, over. Her husband
was tn.tured In the mi~ap and is in
ut!Jl.actory co~d!Uon. '
marshals at Miami for return to Mobile.
A National spokesman said the youth
surrendered to FBI agents "without any
trouble?' ·when the 727 landed at Miami
shortly before noon~ EST~
Tbe fljght ended almost three hours
aft.er FJ3l agenta said the youth boarded
the plane at Mobile, ordered 38
passengers and four stewardesses off
and demanded to be flown to Canada.
He changed bil mind over Tennessee
and allowed the crew to Hy him to
Miami. The only persons aboard with
him were Capt. Robert Carter. co-Pilot
Jack Grahain ind' Flight Engineer Jerry
Gemma.
Laguna W oma.n
Arrested Twice
For .Marijuana
. . , A Laguna Btach woma n arrested
Thursday in a ·sw.eeplng narcotics· raid
by police ·~as arrested agaJn Saturday
evening on the same char1e -possession
ol \narlju~na. .
The document has been accepted, but
not yet adopted by the city.
Wind s of Hurricane
Smash Tw o lo Death
Trustees Cal·I. f o·r Bond
'Officers aald Patty Colleen Yirka, · 31,
of MO Park Ave .. was taken inlo custody
along with three companJOns when the
Joor wer( found allqedly smoking mari-
juana In ,a car parted on Woodland
Drlve. 'nle other three ~ were
ideritiried' aa .Peter A. ·~·olkman. ~
RobertE. Tierney, ,23. a.nd Jackie Elaine
1Titrney, %ti, .. u transients.. , 1
. :A,thortiiea cl1lm · • 1m11n •lflOWll of
,marljuan& was·cOftn~~ed when the fou(
,_. taken .jpto CU!to:<'Y II . ~~ 11
Ut.CINJ. Yugotlavia (AP) -Hur--
ricane winds picked up two workmen
Sunday, carried thorn 70 feet and the~.
smashed them down, Killing one on the
spot.
Marinko Nestorovlc, 48, a father or
five . had hia head smashed against a
ulillty pole. Aslm Felah-:vic, 44, was
h"fpi!allzed with serious injuries.
·• .
technical l11u .. ~Including, dllCUlllon
of a "speclfic.electlon dite -wlU la~
the meetina tonight or Stdclltbaci
Codege trutl~ who have •O"Md to
cal,W for 1 $2.._milllOn bond -.Ue tltll
summer. , 1 •
College Superintendent.,Presldent Dr.
Frtd H. Bremer will ouUtne the 111ec:tlon
o( an election date for · lhe huge revenue 4
tuue. tentatively set for tometlme in
June.
'J, •
•
If tbe rtvenut • recejves lhe
necessary two-thVds majority vote, the 1
fWld ~d Ql)ll(O '°"'truction of the I
• collegt11 permanent ficlliliet up to the I
year trlS 1nd •allow fot the purcha11e
of a alt.e for a second campus ln the
TwJ;tin a.tu.
One prime m90!1 for U,. bond usut
ls doubt In mind& of trusteea and 1<1-j
minlstrators that significant state aid
for construction of Saddleback laclllUta
•
. . ~-
•
. ... . . . . . ,
P·'ll-i Satu~y. · ,
Mi,. Ylrka had ~n arruled 'lbur1da!
rwhen· lllte 111d· local Aan:iotlc.a officers _cµhpi~\id a , !!&.~th ln~Ugatl"!
with the arl'l!l&t Of 30 ~rsona, ln Uje
SoUtb County area. Sbe · wa1 rt leased
Friday on 11.2!0 baU. -·
• • • •,J
Station. off Ortega Highway.
One of the other dune buggies was
driven to the fire station which dispatch-
ed a truck lo the scene and radioed
sheriff's deputies from the. scene.
Floyd's companions were klenUIJed ag
service station owner Jim Tice, Hank
C. Madgin, both of Costa Mesa, and
Marine Rick A. Hughes, of Twentynine
Palms.
Funeral services were pending today •
e
High Court
Rules Out
Draft Case
WASHINGTON (UPI) -The Supreme
Court refused today to allow draftees
to claim conscientious objector status
because of oppogitfon to a specific war
such as Vietnam . The vote was 8 to
1 with justice William O. Douglas dissen-
ting.
In the majority opinion in two test
cases. Justice Thurgood M 1 r 1 h a 11
declared that Congress In enactlnJ: the
Selective Service Law intended to exempt
only persoia ''wbo oppose participation
-in all wars -participation in war in
aiiy form." -
Of I.ht lt(Unte.nl that I draftee should
be able to single out a partic:ilar war
a1 grotlnds for · mnscientioWI objection,
Marshall wrote:
"Persons who object solely t o
participation in a particular war are
not within the. purview of the exempting
Section even though the latter objection
may have such roots in a claimant'•
conscien(:e and personality that it ii
religious in cllaracter."
I~ ~is diBse~t. Douglas 1aij of the
m11J0rlly ruling : "Conscience I 1
repudiated . . . the court has done
violence to the basic philosophy of the
fi"!t amendment and we take 1 step backward."
The decisions upheld lower court rul-
ings against two men who refused to
s~-trrYietnam. -
Guy Porter Glllette of New York City
was sentenced to twn years in prison
for refusing to report for induction . Louis
A. Negre of Bakersfield, Calif., sought
lo get out of the service after he had
been drafted.
Marshall sakf that the court was not
suggesting that Congress could not have
decided to exempt those who object
to a particular war but was determining
lhere was a "neutral , secular justifica·
tion'' for the law u writte n.
Jn other major actioru , the COlHt :
-Decided on a tie, 4-4, vote to let
stand a ruling by Maryla~'• highest
court that the controversial Swedish film.
••1 Am Curioug (Yellow)", was obscenl!.
The tie vote did not &et a high court
precedent in law but merely affirmed
the state court judgment.
-Refused lo hear an appeal by atheist
Madalyn Murray O'Halr who claimed
the. astronaut.I on the. Apollo t and Apollo
11 flights to the moon improperly injected
rellgioll.5 activStJes into their operations.
•
Oraage
,Weather
The fog will roll in along the
coast tonight. living way to sunny
akies on Tuesday, wtth temper14
tures ranging from 62 locally-to
ro further Inland.
INSmE TODA. I'
A Jirriliitr plant iln't th1
proper pl4ce to 111r" up 11011r
noit whf'" offert.d 11 guided
tour, at Lia.st in H"ntington
Beach. Ste ·1tOF\I. Pagi 1.f. .......
C.Mttnllt
CIMdli.t • Cltufflef -·· ,,. .. _. °"" ... ,1( .. .. .. ..., ... ,. ...
l'ftltt'lllMMfll
l'IHM• --Alla L•llfftt
•• '
t4 MIYlll tt • ftlllfllet ,.._ ... ~
, Of'-, a.tr It u-n --,.,..... ,..,,., ae ,. ......,. l>tl ,. '"'°' Mmth 11<11 U T....itltll It
6 "'""" It It W11ttMr 4 •tt WM1e11'I ft ... IJ.l'P If Wtrlll ft._. ...
"
••
•
.J•'
.. .t.. l I •"-'-I -,, Mollda1, March 8. 1971
N. Viets •• Ill Trouble? . •
• • • . R ed Chinese Premier Takes Mystery Trip
At $100,000
For Blast • LONDON (UPI) -Nor1h Vietnam
.. disclosed today that Chinese Communist
~ Premier Chou En-lal had just visited
Hanoi in connection with "U.S. ag-
gression." Diplomats said the visit meant
•· Hanoi ls in trouble and wants help.
First diplomatic assessments of the
· unexpected visit sald Pelting In turn
ls determined not to allow the Hanoi
regime. to be defeated militarily or to
be weakened to the point of political
·· crisis. The diplomatic assessment said the
Chou vlsit reflected the apparent success
of the current U.S.-backed South Viet·
namese operation in Laos against the
Ho Chi Minh Trail.
The high level of the Chinese mission,
its composition, the time of the visit
and not least the fact that Hanoi asked
for the Chine.st leaders all point to
ne• development of crisis proportions,
the assessment said.
Just what Hanoi wants and what Pek-
ing b: ready to Rive remains a matter
for speculation at this early stage of
the Sino-Vietnamese get-together. Peking
all along has urged Hanoi to go on
fighting to victory.
Nor was it ruled out that a similarly
composed Soviet mission might go to
Hanoi -or. alternatively, that top level
talks might be intiated in Moscow.
Anything Jess than that would mark
a clear shift by Hanoi to Peking, at
Oceanside Arrest
Ill< e<penae of MOl<OW.
· p1e1omats vened In Far ~altrn al•
fairs had Utile doubt the Vletnam war
is entering a new, crucial stage with
as yet unpredictable consequences.
Chou has not left China for five years
or more. He quietly dropped plans for
a visit to Africa last year.
Diplomatic sourees noted that among
those accompanying him are not only toe rarty chiefs but also the d e p u l y
chie of staff of the Ollnese army.
The Hungarian news agency MTI
quoted "Peking observers" as saying
Chou 's journey and his talks in Hanoi
"came after the Chinese government
declared it will take every measure
to provide support to the peoples of
Indochina and will not allow the
Americans to do with those peoples as
they please."
MTJ said the official Pelting newspaper
Peoples Dally publi!hed a commentary
today warning that "the American acts
of aggression bear a threat to China,
which wU1 not remain indifferent." It re-
ported a "sympathy demonstration of
millions" in favor of Chinese govern-
ment policy .
Peking has issued a series or sharply
worded official Chinese \tovernment
statements condemning U.S. activities
in Indochina and staling it would not
stand idly by but has made no specific
Marine Suspect Hunted
In Laguna Theft Seized
Laguna Beach detectives were inform-
ed today that a Marine believed t<>
have been involved in a $4,000 robbery
in the Art Colony had been arrested
ln Oceanside. He was not immediately
identified.
Police said the Marine and two ac-
complices allegedly tricked a Laguna
Beach man Into letting them into his
home and then robbed him of all his
be.lo.nging1. The vlcUm of the robbery
was identified as Darryl Josepb Deayn,
of 58.5 Park Ave.
Officers said Deayn became acquainted
with hte serviceman about two weeks
ago afler giving him a ride. The two
Deckhand Seized
After Speargun
Robbery, Kidnap
A teenager who said he was Alaaka-
bound, but got only as far as a Newport
Beach sport!ishing dock was arrested
today in the kidnap-robbery of a waiter
abducted at speargun·point.
lnvesUgators said the 16-year-old
suspect made the mistake of revealing
to his victim where he worked as a
deckhand.
Marlin L. Dart, of 2030~ Harbor
Boulevard, Costa Mesa, called police
after he was released unharmed at
Delaney's Sea Shanty restaurant, near
Davey's Locker.
lnvestlgators contacled the sportfisbing ,.._ ___ nd eICW'!ion-boaL -firm, queailoning.
them about the possible suspect.
The Long Beach youth was taken into
custody and admitted to Orange. County
Juvenile Hall, pending determination of
charges tG be brought against him.
Dart told police he picked up the
boy while hitch-hiking at 3:30 a.m. and
was invited into his motel room at
1977 Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
'
DAllY PILOT
ORANO;;t; (OAIT PU•LISHINO C0M"AM't
l•Mr• N. w •••
Prwtldtnt tnd ,,,,_..,..,.
J.r.li l. C11rf1y
Vkt Praldfll>I ""' a-•I M......,
lhePr11t IC•e•ll
llfltor
lh•"''' >. M11rp1lh1t 11\tMtll'lll Etltlt
Ch1rl11 H. lo•• lllch•rl P. Hilll
Aut.ten; IMOM•ltit llfllOtt ---222 "'''' A¥t ftM• s.. c._.. Offk•
JOI North f.I Cimino A11I
DAIL. Y PllDT. Wlflrl ... !di II ~ ffle H~ t. pulll ...... 11•1'1 _.,. -.
.. , Ill ..,.,.... """"' fW """"" -..ell. .......... / ... ell. C.fl ..... ffwrll ........ hKf', fl"'"'911t y,,...,, .. ft ~ u""""' •rllll '"""'""-,...,. w1111 -r.Jllnff "'*"' M!M .. I ..... ~ ..,_, It •t , J» W.I hY lf,...I, Oita ..,_,
Tet1 p•1• fn 4J MMJl1
Cl ...................... ,.
S.. Cl• •"" Al D.,a1wwwtw
, ....... 4n-44•
i..e-.... ,. ......... .
Tahp••• 4f+MM
~'· "''· °"*"'. OMtt ,......,. ... c.ni-r. ... """ ,--.. fllllt'"'flMt.
.. llWltl -""' • -•dM••* .......... _., .......... ~ .,. .. ,..
nwi.•~.....,.. ...... c.... ....... ,.w ., ,.,.,.,. ..... ..,,. (tote Mttll. CO*""'lt. Sul I ..... ,
W, arr\tf ti.JS ...,lltr, W ,..11 -.n
lfttlllllly1 l'lllltary ......... ti.II ~
became friends, poUce said, and Deayn
gave the Marine bis phone number.
Police said Deayn received a call from
the Marine Friday evening, asking for a ride from the bus station, and Deayn
went to pick the man up. The tv.·o re-
turned to Deayn's home and, with a third
man, were watching television when
50meone knocked on the door.
Officers said the Marine then allegedly
drew a pistol on the two and opened
tbe door for the callers. The trio alleged-
ly tied up Deayn and his unidentified
companion and began a room-by-room
search of . the b<>me, taking all nems
of value. The loot included jewelry, a
stereo, credit cards and a pay check
for $197, all totally valued at $4,294,
officers said.
Laguna Beach detectives are expected
to go to Octanside today to take custody
of the suspect.
Abbie Cardiel's
. Services Held;
Pioneer's Wido'v
Funeral services were held Friday in
Saddleback Mortuary Chapel for Abbie
Cardiel, 23 Monarch Bay, South Laguna ,
who died March 2 in South Coast Com·
munity Hospital at the age of 77.
Mrs. Cardiel was the widow of the
late Alejandro ~rdiel, Orange County
pioneer v.·h<> was a rancher with Edward
Utt. father of the late Rep. James Utt.
-The-Cardle Ir were-1he parents of-1 t
childrtn, all born in the old Utt family
home which they purchased when the
Utts moved to Lemon Heights.
Born in Tustin and a lifelong resident
of Orange County. Mrs. Cardiel had
lived wilh her daughter, Elinore Greene
of South Laguna, for the past four
months. She had many friends in the
area and was known for her devotion
· to nowers. animals and birds .
Mrs. Cardiel is survived by eight
daughters, Priscilla Hoodenpyle o f
Palmdale; Aurora Herrera of Los
Angeles ; Ruby Aguilar of Anaheim ;
Deooisia Kiclllnsci of Temple C I t y :
Emerald TrW<> of Los Angeles; Glorla
Pomeroy of Downey; Diane Compton
of Downey; and Mrs. Greene of South
Laguna : three sons, Antonio Cardiel 0£
Palmdale: Eleaz.er Cardiel of Arcadia:
and Alex:ander Cardiel of Tustin ; and
by 2S grandchildren and 25 areal
grandchildren.
The Rev. Joseph Stevens of San
Clemente Presbyterian Church officiated
at the Friday services which v.·ere follov.'-
ed by..-bwlal at Fairhaven Memorial
Park.
Fol}lling Police
Unit Study Se t
Aleulblllty 1~dy: which recommends
the lnunedlate formation or a police
department In San Juan Capl1trano will
be presented to the city council at
tonlaht's 7 p.m. meeting.
The study, prepared by Richard c .
Grice specl1l consultant In the ileld
of pollct sck:n«, has been completed
and dtstr1buttd to each councilman. The
consulant will ~ avallablc March 11
ror a question and answer se&slon.
The findings of a committee studying
-the feastbUlff' of aMe1ln1 Capistrano
Bt1ch and Dana Point allO will be
dlscuued. The city staff ha!f prt:pared
a rtpOrt llsUng both 1dvant1gt1 and
disadvantages 0( anne.ilng an area twice
Its slit In populaUon.
The annexation aludy w1s requested
by the chambers or commerce of both
communities.
thrtat to send U.Ops to Hanoi's aid •
Hanoi radio tc>day broadcut a state-
ment by the patriotic front of Laos
warning the United States that ii U.S.
infanlrymen enter Laos "the entire re-
sponsibility for the dangerous consequen4
ces arising from this adventurisllc act
will rest with the Nixon administration."
Meanwhile. in Paris chief Hanoi
negotiator Xuan Thuy t<>ld a group or
American pacifists that he had resumed
the long suspended secret peace negotia-
tions with President Nixon's chief peace
negotiator, a spokesman for the pacifist
group said today. ·
Stan Dale of ChicagG. a nev.·sman
for radio station WDAI in the Chicag<>
area. said Xuan Thuy made the
disclosure during a mee.ting with some
of the 170 American pacifists currently
in Paris for meeting with the delegates
to the E'aris p'eace talks.
"Xuan. Thuy told ·us he had met
privately with Ambassador (David K.
E.) Bruce several times," Dale t<>ld
newsmen at a news conference called
by the pacifist g r o u p s from t he
American Friends Service Committee,
clergy and laymen concerned, and the
fellowship of reconciliation.
The remark was the first indication
that secret negotiations between • the
United States and North Vietnam had
been resumed.
T wo T ee n Girls
Critical A fter
Cycle Accidents
Tv.·o teenaged girls who suffered: head
Injuries in separate motorcycle accidents
in Laguna Beach Friday night, remain
in critical condition in South Coast Com-
munity Hospital today.
Brenda Jones, 19, of 5405 Bruce Cres·
cent. Newport Beach and Victoria
Hopkin, 18, of Phoenix, Ariz. have been
in the hospital's intensive care unit since
the accidents, according to a hospital
spokesmen.
Steven Lawrence Curry, 25, of the
Newport Beach address, operator of the
cycle on which Miss Jones was a passen-
ger, was killed in the first accident which
occurred at IO:SO p.m. Friday on Park
A venue near Thurston Intermediate
School.
Miss Hopkin was injured about h a I t
an hour later when the motorcycle on
which she was a passenger crashed in
Lhe 1500 block of Temple HUis Drive.
Gary Edward Kropenick, 3198 Alla
Laguna Blvd., operator or the cycle
involved in the second accident, escaped
wlLh minor injuries.
Police sald that none or the four vic-
tims was wearing a safety helmet and
a coroner's investigator said the dead
man "would have had a good chance
of ~rvlvlng" had he worn a helmet.
The first accident occurred when CWTy
apparently lost control of his cycle on
the steep Park Avenue Hill and swerved.
into the hillside.
The second couple stopped to View
the crash scene and were warned by
officers against riding at h,lgh speed
without crash helmets. Police Claim they
sped off on their bike. only to crash
moments later on a nearby hill.
OAILY P'ILOT S111f l'holt
Here's Looki119 at You
On a clear day you can see Jeff Cabral. U you are Venus Ochoa.
Like a lot or other people, Jeff, 6, and Venus, 10, both of Stanton,
took advantage of the warm weekend \Veather. They had fun in the
sun al Corona del Mar State Beach.
SA Fireman Saves Ape
In Lion Country Sal ari
A Santa Ana fireman who jumped into
the sea lion pond at Lion Country Safari
Sunday to rescue a drowning baby gibbon
ape is credited with saving the
youngster's life.
Officials at the Laguna Hills animal
preserve said Raymond E. Kawalchuk .
37, was watching the antics of the sea
lions when he spotted the little ape
which apparently had tumbled into the
water while playing on an island in
the center of the pond.
Stripping off his shirt and shoes
Kowalchuk climbed the fence and plung-
4 Extra lncl1es
To Cost $8 ,000
Supervisors decided extra caution was
\\'Orth $8,000 last week wtien SuperviSC)['
Ronald Caspers challenged a decision
of a week ago to place pickets closer
together on the Dana Point Quay \Vall
handrail.
ed Int<> the pond. which Is about four
feet deep, l<> pluck out the unconscious
victim.
It was identified as a year-old simiang.
a breed of gibbon ape, about two feet
tall and weighing 15 pounds.
While onlookers cheered. K<>walchuk
rushed the little ape to the Lion Country
animal nursery where a team of vets
\VOrked to revive it.
The simiang was held for observation
in the nursery for a couple of hours,
then returned to its island home. ap·
parently none the worse for its ad-
venture.
The sea lions. according I<> Lion Coun·
try officials, apparently ignored the en·
tire drama. Apes neve r go into wster
voluntarily, they noted, and the baby
undoubtedly tumbled in by accident while
it v.•as cavorting, on the bank.
Sc uba Diver
Believed Dead
WASIDNGTON (AP) -Congre5'1onal
leaders announced today a $100,000
rewar~ for infonnation leading to the
arrest and conviction of the person' or
persons responsible for the bombing or
the Senate wing of the Capitol one week
ago.
Senate Republican Leader Hugh Scott
said the reward money was posted by
private donors whom he v;ould not Iden·
tlfy.
Scott and Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield said the donors volun·
leered to put up the mcmey which bu
been placed in escrow in a bank.
~fansfield said the bank could not bl
identified, either.
The reward was announced after House
and Senate leaders met to discuss RCUfi4
ty of the Capitol.
Mansfield said they agreed that the
Capitol police force should be made
fully pr.ofessional, with no more
patronage appointments.
Scott said he was not at liberty to
say whether invesligators have any hard
leads in their hunt for whoever placed
a bomb in a men's room on the first
floor of the Capitol.
The bomb exploded in the ear~orn·
Ing hours of ?i.farch~t, causing damage
estimated at $300,000. No one was in·
ju red.
?i.tansfield and Scott issued a statement
saying "any person or persons providing
information will be fully protected.
Sources of information will be regarded
as completely confidential." ·1
They said anyone having information
on the bombing should make it available
to any law enforcement agency or o!4
ficial , including local offices of the FBI.
Their formal statement said congres-
sional leaders "have been advised that
the money has been made available
by private sources."
Scott, Mansfield, House Speaker Carl
Albert (D-Okla.), Rep. Hale Boggs (D-
La .). and Gerald R. Ford CR-Mich.),
the House majority and minority leaders;
and Sen. Allen Ellender (D-La.), the
Senate president pro-tern, all 1lgned the
reward announcement.
Scott said at the conferenct on Capitol
security, congressional leaders also
agreed to have police and their sergeanlt
at arms make new recommendatlODJ
on security procedures, including the
hours the building will beopen to th•
public.
Viejo Man Held
By Texas Police
On Pot Cl1arges
SAN Al"llTONIO Tex. (UPI) -Police
confiscated $1 ,500 worth of marijuana
and arrested three persons. including
a Mission Viejo man. Sunday on a
highway east of San Antonio.
--~Th'-""e_,.iQLestinuited_ to cost $269,092
was upped lo $277,092 v.·hen the board
,·oted to ha ve the pickets five inches
apart instead of nine inches.
Caspers. absent last week when the
decision was made said he had ex-
perimented with small children and
spaces between pickets and thought nine
inches was safe .
Want Fight Info?
Better--Check
Tuesday's Paper
A s c u b a diver missing off Calalina
Island Sunday is presumed drowned !<>-
day and the Coast Guard search has
been called off.
Tex.as highway patrolmen Jar le 1
Fielding and Don 'Thompson curbed ••
automobile which sped tbrough their
radar trap. The officers said the three
persons insidelfiF Car l5egin acting
suspiciously so Fielding and Thompson
searched the vehicle. Their search turned
up. they claim, 18-0ne-pound packets ef
high grade marijuana valued a~ $1,500.
You may have watched America's
astronauts plant Old Glory on the moon
via home television but you won't get
sin1ilar treatment for the henalded
"Fight of the Century" from New York
City tonight.
Home television is blacked out this
evening when two prize fighters known
as "Smok.in' J<>e" Frazier and Mubam·
mad "The M<>uth" Ali battle it out
at 7:30 p.th. our lime for the undisputed
heavywelgbt cbampJonship of the world.
Radio. too, has had lls wlres chopped
al ringsi~.
There is one exceptl<>n wherein a
round.by-round recap of what's just hap-
pened wlll be broadcast from a po"ertul
little multi-watter station situated Jn
beautiful downtown Burbank.
Station KBBQ or Burbank will start
broadcasting pre-light dope tonight at
7:05 o'clGCk and then at 7:30 begin
recapping eacl! r<>und as Frazier and
All go at It In Ptfadison-Square Garden .
~II this comes about because KBBQ
is a member of tbe Mutual Network
·whi ch has a special line In at ringside.
They didn't get It without a court fight
first before the real fight.
Admittedly, tbls isn't going l<> be the
perfect solution for blacked-out Southern
Californians.
"Our signal Is a bit difficult to pick
up," a KBBQ spokesman admitted t<>
the DAlLY PlLOT today. "We have
a six-tower palte:m but we have to
weaken our signal down your way to
protect a Mexican station."
To clarify the technical talk. lhe KBBQ
spokesman suggests [\ght followers can
tune them in st 1500 on the A~·t dial
-"just to !he left of KPOL at 15'40."
For fight fanatics who just can·t
fathom all th is. there is always the
closed.circuit tele.,lslon In thell!T'! and
auditoriums aomewher& near you. Fifteen
bucks a seat for the black·and·whlte:
picture and if you insist on color video,
the out scale ls 125, llO, 115 and 110.
Of course, at those prices you run
the risk one of the 'principals• might
faint during Round I or maybe even
during pre-fight inatructJons.
I
The diver. identified as Dennis Holpes
of Downey. left the private boat Esceria
v.·ith enough for about an hour's dive
Sunday morning, but failed to return.
The three v.•ere chnrged with posses-
sion of marijuana and jailed. Additional
charges v.•ere expected to be filed loday.
There are 2.6 miles of guay v.•a ll
handrails and 69,106 square feet of con-
crete walkways in the Dana Harbor
project.
A Coast Guard spokesman said a
search v.·as cond ucted from Bird Rock
to the west end of the island until
darkness forced searchers to give up.
The three were identified as Elmer
Dv.·ayne ~larpcr. 22. of Atlanta, Ga.:
Danny Knight, 20, of Auburn. Ga.; and
James Derosby, 22. of to.11ssion VJejG.
•
·cASH
LOANS1
"OLDEST · AND ASIEST
WAY TO BORROW"
Bo1Tow from $5 to $I 00, an<!
more, INSTANTLY. No red
tape, no credit check!. All you
need j5 an item for conateral.
NO EXLANATION NECESSARY.
AL~ LOANS CONFIDENTIAL
• Fast • Friend~ • Convenient
• Come in cmCI -wliat ,..
offer our customers. A new
and unusual experience in
In shopping enjoyment.
Where people In the know
save money every time they
buy.
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
COSTA MESA JEWELRv--·and LOAN .
LOA N, IUY, SILL, TIADE · .
1838 NEWPORT BLVD· PHONE 646·774 1
OOWNTOW N COSTA ME SA -Bt '-n Harbor & Broadway
(
-~ .. '
l
1
7
l
I
7
San Clemente Today's Final
Ca istrano_ EDITION N.Y. Stoeks
voe. 64, NO. 57, l SECTIONS, 32 PAGES ORANGE COUNTY, CALIFORNIA MONDAY, MARCH 8, 1971 TEN CENTS
Capo Schools Start Program for Handicapped
By PAMELA KALl..AN
01 1111 DlllY '!loll S111t
Children with cerebral palsy and other
handicaps may have a chance to improve
their ability to function because of a
new class that began today. .
The Capistrano Unified School District
has initiated its first program for multi·
handicapped children - a program fully
funded by the stale.
''W.e're starting with lwo classes which
will progressively involve 13 children,"
said Charles Johannsen, Pupil Personnel
E>irector.
"Eventually we'll have three clas,,es."
But in the beginning only a -few children
will be Involved with more · added each
day. 1'hi3 will make. tt easier for both
children and pa.rents ta adopt to a new
learning situation, a c c o r d i n g to
Johannsen. And eventually the parents
will fade out of the school pictw:e.
"Most ot the children are pr~
schoolers," he explained. "Some wiU be
as young as 18 months old."
The ultimate result of the program
will be to !telp children attain certain
education levels -levels that will permit
• es an I
$800 Bill
Dr~pped
ByD ~ner
By JOHN VALTERZA
OI lllt: OlllY 1"1111 S111f
The building designer whose extra bill
for $800 in added services for tht new
community clubhouse was rejected last
week has decided to let the matter
drop.
Erk Boucher. who recently drafted
the clubhouse designs, then said he was
sent back to the drawing boards for
changes in air ainditioning systems, said
that despite justificition for the extra
charges, he would not press for payment
-. . . ,_
•
' I ,. '
them t.o existing dlrstrict progTams.
"Some will move into the educable
or trainable mentally retarded programs.
Others will enter the regular school
program," said the director.
The education process will be both
physical and mental. Language develop-
ment. coordination, and communication
will be pursued. Two teachers. Mrs .•
Mar:y Condon and Mrs'. Barbara Barnes
will supervise the educational develop-
ment of each child, but many volunteers
wtll be Involved.
The temporary headquarters for lhe
•
program is Crown Valley School In
Laguna Niguel, where there are facilities
available for such a program.
A final loc::Uon for portable classrooms
which are being built to meet the pro-
gram 's special needs hasn 't yet been
decided .
Johanssen said t h e r e are air
prqximately 45 children that have been
identirted • with multi-handicaps in the
Capis trano , Laguna Beach and San Joa-
quin districts.
"A few children from Laguna are in·
volved now but we will be providing
• e Ill I
Bond Cost
Per Year
Said $6.56
If San Clemente's volers approve all
four of the parks and recreation bond
items on the April 20 ballot. the cost
to an average homeonwer would run
$6.56 a year to pay back lhe debt.
In detailed information on all four
ballot items, city staff this week pointed
out specific costs of bond redemption
and interest over a ·30-year period.
The averag~ percentage for the bond b!!Cmt ,...Id no! jJiout S.l'pil'le\lf.
ttem-by-f!tn}: tKe' specifics 6f 'tfie bond
Jssues 1 and lhe lr · costs fo 'tfle owneT
of a $23,000home {awssed value : $7,000 )
would be :
Councilmen last week unanimously re-
jected the charges, but Boucher later
said the fees were for several da ys'
work and redrafting of several pages
FRAZIER, LEFT, SAYS HE 'S COOL: THEN BOMB SCA RE
Muh1mm1d All, &v•r Confident, Punches Small 819
-For Proposition A. the new. $400,000
community clubhouse replacement at 100
Calle Seville. the cost in fiscal year
19i1·'72 would be $2.63 Lo tfie average
taxpayer.
of the designs on orders from Mayor
Walter Evans and consent from City
M3nager Ken Carr and Parks Supt.
Arlie Waterman.
Carr and lhe Mayor denied having
place:d the order.
SpecificaJly, Boucher said. the Mayor
and several other councilmen questioned
Boucher's choiCf: of an electric air con·
ditioning system.
Security, Tension High
For Title Fight Tonight
-For the costs of Proposition B. cover-
ing a $350.000 repla~ent lo lhe city's
Beach Club used f youth.. recreatiao
activities, the payback cost to the
aver age taxpaye r would be $2.30 per
year.
-For Proposition C. the $140,000 item
covering costs for development of public
n e ighborhood parks-including com·
pletion of half-finished ones, the cost
per average home owner would be 92
cents a year
"I had no idea lh~t. Mayo_r. E_van.~ 'NEW YORK fUPI ) _ J F ·., was an expert on air cond1bon1ng, . . o~ ra zie
Boucher said. and _Gm:s1u.t C~y .we1ghtd in at th.e
he-designel"-8dded-tha recent-e1.....__b.ttttM.ll;<d thtir live.s ~11 for the!r
periences with the city-Owned golf course h~avyrot1ght cha~pions 1p .. Oout m
clubhoUse gas system pointed out pro-~fadtson Square Garden tonight.
blems. Frazitr camt in at 205* pounds.
"Electric was cheaper according to and ht uxu followed to the scales nn
my· experts on the matter. so I chose hour and a half laur by the 2 J 5·
to include it." pound Clay.
But Evans asked that the system be "I'm going to straighten it all out
replaced with a gas one as Boucher tonight." Cloy shouted to the mob of
had originally intended. . reporters and hangers-on.
"l didn·t have a set of plans with
gas air conditioning on them. so I had
to sit down and redraft several plates."
Boucher said. "and I spen t a lot of
time and effort on the new work. That's
why I sent a late bill."
The designer's original bill for the
clubhouse design had a ceiling of '14,000.
His fee is based on a fonnula of 5.5
percent of the total construction cost
Qf the new clubhouse.
Boucher, whose feuding with Evans
and members of the city sWf bas sim-
mered for weeks, said his fees are
not exhorbitant and says he believes
his sax> bill was justified.
The aiuncil last week hired the
Architectural firm of Renfro and Jordan
at a J~ 9f eight .. pe~nt for a fire
headquarters.
NEW YORK (AP) - A vague bomb
scare. a reported threat on Joe Frazier's
life and tightened security measures ad·
ded to the theatrical atmosphere as
tension mounted for t o n I g h t ' s
heavyweight title fighl between Frazier
and Muhammad Ali (See sports, Page
23 ).
Eight detedives were said to be
guarding Fraz.ier and his manager .
Yancey Durham. after the heavyweight
champion reportedly received a lelter
and later an anonymow; telephone call
threatening his life if he did not throw
tile right.
Fraz1er u well as his manager were
in hiding. not available for comment. .•~. • • •1
A source close lo Frazier, however,
insisted that the threats were made .
Also another report e.irculated Sunday
ihat the City SqutreTotITTffi'iarSeventh
Avenue and 52nd Street. Frazier's normal
New York headquarters, had received
a bomb threat.
The same Frazier source said that
the threat was checked out but no bomb
was found. Five hundred special police
have been assigned to Madison Square
Garden.
Both Frazier and Muhammad Ali con-
tributed to the cloak-and-Oagger at·
mosphere surrounding the projected $.10
million spectacular when they broke
camp Saturday night, came to New York
and immediately went Into hiding.
Both were unavailable lo newsmen .
However, the garrulous and outgoing
Ali walked lhe Manhattan streets Sunday.
entered coffee shops. chatted and signed
autographs for admirers and even paid
a visit to Madison Square Garden, scene
of the fight.
Threat! and rumors for years have
been routine at big heavyweight fights.
most of them regarded as the work
of pranksters and fanatics. Few are
taken seriously.
-The final ballot item, Proposition
....n.-.auowing..for improvement oLpublic
beach access and facililies (Including
some moderate improvements at the
decaying pier el'ltrancel the cost would
run 71 cents per year.
City Manager Ken Carr said that the
exaci cosl.5 per taxpayer are slightly
variable and are based on estimates
of assessed valuation which are as ac·
curate as humanly possible.
The figures quoted for the next fiscal
year, he added, would amount to pro·
hably the highest during the JO.year
payback period for the bonds.
Thus far the entire bond issue-which
shares the ballot with trustee candidates
for the Capistrano Unified and Sad·
dleback Community College districts-
has received the endorsement of direc-
tors of the San Clemente. Chamber of
Commerce, the San Clemente Jaycees
and several other city grout>s.
'S pecific War~
Objection Nixed
"J don't see why the city is willing
to pay lhaf high a percentage to a
firm to design a simple fire head·
quarters. when they paid much less
for our services on a much more complex
Saddlehack Trustees Talk WASHINGTON (UP!l -The Supreme
Court refused today lo allow draftees
to claim conscientloull objector status
building." he said.
The firehouse designers ttt not San
Clemente residents.
"I guess the city," Boucher said, "goes
by the motto that if you're local. then
you're yokel, but if you come from
out of town you're an expert ."
Winds of Hurricane
Smash Two to Death
ULC\NJ. Yugo•lovl• (AP) -Hur·
ricane wind.~ picked up two workmtn
Sunday. arried them 70 fttl 3nd then
11masbed them down, killing one on the.
IJ)Ol.
Marinko Nestorovtc. 48. 1 father •f
fivt . ht1d his head 11mashM againat .1
utility pole. Aslm Fetahovic, 44. WJJ
hospitalized with serious Injuries.
I
because of opposition to a specific war
On Summer Bond Election such as Vietnam. The vole was 8 to
I wlth justice William O. Douglas dissen-
ting .
Technical issues -Including di8CIWlon
o( a SP'Ciric election d1te -will launch
lhe meet.I ng tonight of Saddleback
College trustees who have agreed to
call for 1 $24.&-milllon bond issue this
summer. '
Colt•c• Suporinteodent-Pmidtnt Or.
Fred H. Bremer WUI oulllno1he ,.1«11pt1
of an election dAlt for the huge revenue
issue, tentatively set for sometime Jn
June.
If the reven11e It.am reQeives the
necmary 1 .... thinb· majOrity vote, tho
fund would asaure ronstruction of the
college's permanent ftcillties up lo the
year 1975 And allow ror the purchase •
ln the majority opinion in two testw
of a site for a second campus in the cases, Justice Thura:ood Ma r s h a l I
Tustin arca. declamJ lhat COngress In enacling the
One prime reason for lhe bond is.sue Selective Service Law Intended to exempt
Is doubt in minds of trustees and ad-only persons "Who oppose participation
minls trat.on that significant state aid in all wars -participation in war Jn
for construction of Saddlcback facilities any form."
is forthcoming. Of the argument that a draftee should
, Among the buiJdings· proposed for the be able to alngle out a particular war
• JllO.tcre Miuion Viejo campus which as grounds for conscientious objectkln,
would be financed through the bonds Marshall wrote:
would tie a 1cience·mathemallcs build.Ing "PersoM who ObJec\.-. 50lelY to
and a fine arta building muter-1>lontd. -partk:l))'tlon· In· a particu11r war art
for ~ctJM in lf12,.'73: a UJD"· 1 rit.t wkhln the purview of lhe exempting•
nalium, ~ t<b:olion complOt ond ioC&n· oven though tho latter objoclton
administration building In 197$-'74 and . m1y have S\ICh roots ln a clalmarrt's•
technology llnd y,ien« c: I 1 s s r o o m conscience and personaUt)' lhat lt I~
buildings In 197._ '75. religlou1 In character."
' '
• I
•
educalion for our own children first
and if there is room for other1. children
from outside the district will be ac·
cepted," he said.
Not all children qualiry. Some with
particular handicaps. for example the
blind or deaf, might be better in a
school designed to meet thal particular
problem.
Johannsen said children who are
autistic, have cerebral palsy, Downs syn-
drone la form of retardation), brain
damage or gross motor coordination han-
dicaps will be eligible to be screened
I ~··
.4rthllst
(\ctrbss Jan e Fon~a ~Us net.;"
conference "civil disobedience''
ls-...,needed as she annoanCes
tvlay anti-war offensive to close
nation's capital. See story on
Page seven.
Police Capture
10 Aliens
At Bus Depot
San Clemente Pol.ice Chief Clifford
Murray interrupted breakfast this morn·
ing to-lead in the arrest of IO aliens
who had been puriUed up._lhe_San.Diego
Freeway by Border Patrol agents.
The arrests of the seven men and
three women al lhe Greyhound bus depot
in San Clemente took place shortly after
8 a.m.
Border Patrolmen ~aid two cabsful
of Mexican nationals were Initially notic·
ed near the checkpoint below San Onofre.
The car stop operation wa.s not active,
however.
The agents gave chase lo the two
cabs which had more than a mile
headstart. then summoned help ahead
in San Clemente.
At about 8: 1$ a.m. Murray said he
noticed three men waiting near the sta-
tion. then became curious as a blue
sedan arrived.
As the three men jumped into the
auto. Murray blocked their e•it with
his station wagon and called for
assista nce from patrolman.
... The,10 illegal entrants will be returned
lo Mexico, Border patrolmen &aid. • •
The cab drivers. who had driven the
aliens upcoast from San Diego, were
not held, officers said.
Secret Service ·-
Talk Scl1eduled
Resident Secret Service Agent Ken
Icavoni, attached to the Western White
House, will discuss aspecta of Presiden-
tial security Wednescliey fol' the 1 general
membership of the Capi.11trano Beach
Chamber of Commerce.
lkavonl, on petnWlmt assignment to 1
the 'San Clementt: detail, will diacuss
"PreeaullQnary Proctedure on Security ,
for lhe Presldeot and his Family." Tbe
l81k will be dllring the monUy noon
luncheon meeting of the chamber at ·
Pflte and Clara's Restaurant In San Juan
Ca pistrar10. Chamber mtmbers and
guests are welaime.
i
for the program. Most will have more
then one handk:ap.
Funding for the program was made
available by the state at he beginning
of the year. SinCf: few districts had
applied for funding. the deadline for
applications were extended, g I v I n g
Capistrano enough time to organize ' a
program.
The state provides $50',000 a year and
Johanssen has estimated that the budget
can be kept within the boundaries of
the stipend.
Dune Buggy
.
Falls With
Bra\\~s Off
Dangling on a 350-foot canyon clUf,
a Costa ~1esa man held his dune buggy
In place while his wife and daughter
clambered out Sunday, then plunged to
his death on lhe rocks below.
Horrified fr iends who frantically helped
steady lhe little car watched Ill It plum·
mited upsid~down into a dry creek bed,
crushing the victim beneath it.
Dead Is Richard B. Floyd. 35, of 258
E. 21st St., wboR body waa ~recovered
from the remote. rugged terraln In
Cleveland National' Fo~est several hours
la ter.
Orange County Sheriff's search and
rescue ltam members used ropes and
pulleys to haul the mangled body back
to the rugged trail.
lnvestigatorll classed the tragic ac-
cident as a non-motor vehicle fatality.
Sheriff's Sgt. Lewis E. Stavenhager
said the accident occurred at 2 p.m .•
but details were unavailable for several
hours due to inaccessibillly of the· area .
Three hourll alone were spent reaiver-
ing Floyd's corpse.
Recounting the tale of horror, Deputy
Marty Yingling said three fam ilies took
dune buggies to the remote area, near
the intersection of Trabuai and El Cariso
truck trails.
One veteran rescuer branded the
weekend trek as terribly foolish. due
to--hal.ardous conditions. a a d in·
accessibility.
Deputies said the group wall enjoying
t.he exhilarating off-street sport -riding
in line -when Floyd's dune buggy,
in the lead, slithered up to the precipice
in a shower of sand and mud.
Scrambling to the family's aid, com·
panions helped hold the buggy in place
while Mrs. Lillian .Floyd and the couple's
small daughter stepped to llafety.
Grim and tehified. Floyd kept his
feet planted firn'lly on the brakes.
"But the second he look his feet off
and tried to escape. the buggy fell,"
said one deputy. "He dldn·t have a
chance."
His horrified family watched the fatal
plunge, which was placed at about 10
miles northeast of the El Cariso Fire
Stat.ion, off Ortega Highway.
One of the other dune buggies was
driven to the fire station which dispatch·
ed a truck to the scene and radioed
sheriff's deputies from the scene.
Orange .. ~
Weather
The fog will roll Jn along lhe
coast tonight. giving way to aunny
skies on Tuesday, with ttmpera·
lures ranging 'from 62 locally to
70 further Inland.
INSIDE TOBI\ Y
A ferliliter plant l.m't the
proper place to turn up 11our
nose 11.1he-n offertd B guided
tour . Qt ltt11t in Huntingto.-
Beach. Set! 1tor11, Pagt 14.
... t!Jtt H Ct'"'°"'le t
Clltc:-1111 u, 1 c......... 11.n
Ctf!lk• 11 c,.......... lt
DHlfl lllelkK 11 ••1,., .. 1 '"' ' 1•"'1•111-1 It
llhttllH •11 ... __ "
AH LMMrt IS
I
M..,ltt • HtllMtl l6twl ~I
Orl!IN ~ It ""'f• ,..,,.,. ,. 'iHm ft.UI
' lflkli IMl1lel• lW1
Tti.•lllffl lt
T1'1Mttft It
WellW 4
w.-•1 lllN'I U•IJ
WW. ""' ... I
. '
--t.T :'. ,., .. Monday, Match 8, 19/l
N. Viets • Ill Trouble? Rewru~d Set
Red Chinese Premier Takes Mystery Trip
At $100,000.
For Blast LONDON (VP!) -North Vlttnam
dlaclostd today that Chinese C01M1unist
Premier Chou En.Jal had just visited
Hanoi in connection with "U.S. ag.
gression." Diplomats said the visit meant
Hanol ii In trouble and wants help. nnt diplomatic assessments or the
unexpected visit &aid Peking in turn
ls determined not to allow the Hanoi
regime to be defeated militarily or to
be weakened to the point of political
crisis.
1'he diplomatic assessment uld the
Chou visit refiected the apparent 1ucctSs
of the cWTent U.S.·backed South Viet·
namese operation ln Laos against the
Ho Oti Minh Trail.
The high level of the Chinese mlSlion,
lts compo.!ition, the time of the visit
and not leul the fact that Hanoi asked
for the Chinese leaders all point ·to
new development of crisis proportion!,
the usesament said.
Just what Hanoi wants and what Pek·
Ing is ready to give remains a matter
for speculation al this early st.age of
the Sjoo...Vletnamese get.together. Peking
all along has urged Hanoi to go on
fighting to victory.
Nor was it ruled out that • simllarly
composed Soviet mission might 10 to
Hanoi -or, alternatively, that top level
0 talks might be intiated in Moscow.
Anything Jess than that would mark
a clear shift by Hanoi to Peking, at
Oceanside Arrest
the tlpellle ol "'-''" Diplomata versed ln Far Eastern tf·
fain had Ullla c1oubl lbe Vietnam war
Is entering a new, crucial stage with
as yet unpredictable consequencts.
Chou has not left China for five years
or more. He quietly dropped plans for
a visit to Africa last year.
Diplomatic sources noted that among
those accompanying him are not only
top rarty chiefs but also the ti e p u t y
chle ol staU of the Chinete army.
The Hungarian news agency 1.ITl
quoted ''Pelting observers" as saying
Chou's journey and his talks in Hanoi
;'came after the Chinese government
declared It will take every measure
to provide support to the peoples of
Indochina and will not allow the
Americans to do with those peoples as
they please."
MTI said the official Peking newspaper
Peoples Daily published a commentary
today warning that ''the American acts
()f aggression bear a threat to China,
which will not remain indifferent." It re-
ported a "sympathy demonstration of
millions" In favor of Chinese 1overn·
ment policy •
Peking has ls1ued a series or sharply
worded official Chinese government
statements condemning U.S. activities
in 1ndochina and stating It would not
!itand Idly by but has made no specific
Marine Suspect Hunted
In Laguna Theft Seized
Laguna Beach detectives were lnfonn-
ed today that a Marine believed . to
have been involved in a $4,000 robbery
in the Art Colony had been arrested
in Oceanside. He was not immediately
jdentifled.
Police said the Marine and two ac-
complices allegedly tricked a Laguna
Beach man into Jetting them into his
home and then robbed him of all hi.!
belon1ings. The victim of the robbery
wu identified as Darryl Joseph Deayn,
of 585 Park Ave.
Officers said Deayn became acquainted
with hte serviceman about two weeks
a10 after 1ivlng him a ride. Toe two
Deckharu:l Seized
After Speargun
Robbery, Kidnap
A teen11er who aaid he w11 Alaska·
boond, but cot only as far as a Newport
Beach sportiishlng dock was arrested
today in the kidnap-robbery ()f a waiter
abducted at spear1un-point.
lnvest11ators 1&id the 15-year-<>ld
suspect made the mistake of rtvealing
to bis vlcUm where he worked as a
deckhand.
Marlin L. Dari, of 203011 Har~
Boulevard, Costa Mesa, called police
after be was released unharmed at
Delaney's Se a Shanty restaurant. near
Davey's Locker.
lnvestigatocs contacted lhe sportflshing
and excursion boat firm, questionln1
them about the possible suspect.
theLon1--Uiacb yo11th was-taken into
custody and admitted to Oran1e County
Juvenile Hall, pending deteiminaUon of
charges to be brou1ht against him.
Dart told police he picked up the
boy while bitch-hiking al 3:30 a.m. and
was invited into' bis motel room al 1m Newport Blvd., Costa Mesa.
Ol!AN•I COi.iT
DAILY PILOT
OUHl#il co.uT PUILllHlirtG OlMl'AHY
l •ltert N. w,,4
p,_ldtllf Ind Mlllhlr
J1ck It. C11rf,.,
'VICtl l'ralde11t .,.,.. O-•I "'.,......
lli•1111• tc ••• 11
Editor
llio1111t A. M111r~1., ~l'lllllnt E11•
Ch1rf11 H. l e•• 1tlilri1r4 P. HIM
AAl1IM1: """'911'11 lf.dtlon ---212 for••• A••nu• S-C._..C>Me.
J OI Hottlri £1 Ct111i-• k••I
.,_ """• C•Ut Me$11; »II W•r ••¥ $1!Wf H...,...-t a.di: #SI N.-..-t 9ov~
H1111tlllelln •1Kt11 11115' a..<11 loullvl NI
OAIL V 1"1\.0'f', wllfl Mlktl .. ~ tllt ,._...,..... .. ,......,. '""" '""" ._ 4•• Ill ..,.,.i. '""""' .., ................
Nf'IWllll'I ...,._ C.ft ._... """'""""' ~ .. di, .._..'" 11'1111'1', IM" ~"'
C.aCNtt-.tflll ""' .... '~ •It'll' '#11'1 -•eoi...t --.. ,.._~ ~ ..,..., It
11 • Ut w.t .. ., 11,..I, CM• MfW.
,1.e.,••• en•• MJ-4111
a..tfW. M•lkl I Ml-UH
S. Clc ·a Al •••,_""f ,,, , ... '" .......
i.... ..... Al lqxst ..... ,
T1l1p•111 •t•MM I
~. 1'71, Oft•· c.nt .... llMW 0...lftY. ... ...... ........, .... n... •1"'"91 _.,.. .,. ~It ......
...... "" ~· wffflM .... ,.,.. ,... ... _f/f ~ .-.. .._.,1, .......... ,. ... .,. ........... ..... c:. ....... ,,.,..... .......,.,...
.., C9fflW a.ti -IMYt W -.fl ea,n __,,,, """""" .. ,..,....,.,., id'.tf ~.
~
I
became friends, police saJd, and Deayn
gave the Marine bis phone number.
Police uid Deayn received a call from
the Marine Friday evening, asking for
e ride from the bus station, and Deayn
went to pick the man up. The two re·
turned to Deayn's home and, with a third
man, were watching television wben
S<>meone knocked on the door.
Officers said the Marine then alleged ly
drew a pistol on the two and opened
the door for the callers. The trio alleged-
ly tied up Deayn and his unidentilied
companion and be1an a room·by-room
search of the home. taking all Jtem.!
()f value. The loot included jewelry, a
stereo, cred it cards and a pay check
for '197, all totally valued at '4,294,
offictrs said.
Laguna Beach detectives are expected
to go to Oceanside today to take custody
of tbe suspect.
Abbie Cardiel's
Se~<;es Held;
Pioneer's Widow
Funeral services were held Friday in
Saddleback Mortuary Chapel for Abbie
Cardiel, 23 Monarch Bay, South Laguna,
who died March 2 in South Coast Com·
munity Hospital at the age of 77.
Mrs. Cardiel was the widow of the
late Alejandro Cardiel. Orange County
pioneer who was a rancher wlth Edward
UU. father ()f the late Rep. James Utt.
The Card.leis were tbe parents of 1 t
children, all born in the old Utt family
home-WhiCh~tJlly°l>urchased -when the
Utts moved to Lemon Heights.
Born in Tustin and a lifelong resident
of Orange Cc>unty, Mrs. Cardiel had
lived with her daughter, Elinore Greene
of South Laguna , for the past four
months. She had many friends In the
area and was known for her devotion
to flowers, animals and birds.
Mrs. Cardiel is survived by eight
dauehters, Priscilla Hoodenpyle of
Palmdale; Aurora Herrera of Los
Angeles ; Ruby Aguilar ()f Anah eim:
Deonisia Kicilinsci of Temple C i t y ;
Emerald Trillo of l<is Angeles: Gloria
Pomeroy of Downey; Diane Compton
of Downey ; and Mrs. Greene of South
Laguna ; three sons, Antonio Cardiel of
Palmdale: Eleazer Cardiel or Arcadia:
and Alexander Cardiel of Tustin: and
by 26 grandchildren and 25 great
grandchildren.
The Rev. Joseph Stevens of San
Clemente Presbyterian Chu rch officiated
al the Friday services which were follow-
ed by burlal at Fairhaven Alemorlal
Park.
Forming Police
Unit Study Set
A feasibility study which recommends
the immediate formation of a police
department in San Juan Capistrano will
be presented to the city council at
tonight's 7 p.m. meeting.
The .!l,Jdy, prepared by Richard C.
Grace special consultant In the field
of police science, has been completed
and distributed to ea ch councilman. The
consulant will be aval11ble March 11
for 1 question and answer session.
The flnding1 ()f a committee studying
I.ht feasibility ()f annexing Caplatrano
Btach and Dana Point also will be
dlscusted. The city staff has prepared
11 report llsUnR both advantages ~d
dla.advantaae1 ol 1nnexint1 an area twi ce
its slzt In population.
The annexation study was requested
by the chemben of commerce of both
communities.
' I
thrtat to send troops to Haaot'a aid.
Hanoi radio lodl)' broadc111 a 1tete·
ment by the patrloUc front of Laot
warning the United States that if U.S.
Infantrymen enter Laos ''the entire re-
sponsibility for the dangeroos consequen·
ces arising from this adventuristic act
will rest with the Nixon administration.''
J\1eanwhile. in Paris chief Hanoi
negotiator Xuan Thuy told a group or
American pacifists that he had reswned
I.he long suspended secret peace negotla·
lions with President Ni.ton·a chief peace
negotiator-, a spokesman for the pacifist
group said today.
Stan Dale of Chicago, a newsman
for radio statlon WDAI in the Chicago
area, said Xuan Thuy made the
disclosure durin1 a meetine: with some
of the 170 American pacifists currently
in Paris for meetin1 with the delegates
to the Paris peace talks.
"Xuan Thuy told w he had met
privately with Ambassador (David K.
E.) Bruce-several times," Dale told
newsmen at a news conference called
by the pacifist g r o u p s from t he
American Friends Service Committee,
clergy and laymen concerned, and the
fellowship of reconclllatlon.
The remark was the first indication
that secret negotiations between the
United States and North Vietnam had
been resumed.
Two Teen Girls
Critical After
Cy cle Accidents
T'"·o teenaged girls who suffered head
injuries in separate motorcycle accidents
in Laguna Beach Friday night, remain
in critical condition in South Coast Com-
munity Hosp ital today.
Brenda Jones, 19, of 5405 Bruce Cres·
cent. Newport Beach and Victoria
Hopkin , 18, of Phoenix, Ariz. have been
in the hospital's intensive care unit since
the accidents, according to a hospital
i;pokesmen.
Steven Lawrence Curry, 25, of the
Newport Beach address, operator ()f the
cycle on which Miss Jones waa a passen·
ger, was killed in the first accident whiclt
occurred at 10:50 p.m. Friday on Park
A venue near Thurston Intermediate
School.
Miss Hopkin was injured about ha I f
an hour later when the motorcycle on
"'hich she was a passenger crashed In
the 1500 block of Temple Hills Drive.
Gary Edward Kropenick. 3198 Alta
Laguna Blvd., operator of the cycle
involved in the second accident, escaped
wiili mioor injuries.
Pollet sai4 that none or the four vie·
tims was wearing a safety helmet and
a coroner's investigator said the dead
man "would have had a 1ood chance
or surviving" had he worn a helmet
The first accident occurred whe n Curry
apparently Jost control or his cycle on
the steep Park Avenue Hill and swerved
into the hillside.
The second couple stopped to view
the crash scene and were warned by
officers against ridlng at hilh speed
without crash helmets. Police claim they
sped off on their bike, only to crash
moments later on a nearby hill.
Want Fight Info?
Better Check
Tuesday's Paper
DAILY l'ILOT Sllfl 1'11919
Here's Looking at You
On a clear day you can see Jeff Cabral. If you are Venus Ochoa.
Like a lot of other people, Jeff, 6, and Venus, 10, both of Stanton,
took advantage of the warm weekend weather. They had fun in the
sun at Corona de.I Mar State Beach.
SA Firemnn Saves Ape
In Lion Country Safari
A Santa Ana fireman who Jumped into
1he sea lion pond at Lion Country Safari
Sunday to rescue a drowning baby gibbo11
ape is credited with saving the
youngster's life.
Officials at the Laguna Hills animal
preserve said Raymond E. Kawalchuk ,
37, was watchtn1 the antics of the S<'a
lions when he spotted the little ape
which apparently had tumbled into the
water while playing on an island in
the center of the pond.
Strlpplng off his shirt and shoes
Kowalchuk climbed the fence and plung·
4 Extra Inches
To Cost $8,000
ed Into the pond, which Is about four
feet deep, to pluck out the unconsclou.9
vic tim.
It was identified as a year-old simiang,
a breed of gibbon ape, about two feet
tall and weighing 15 pounds.
While onlookers cheered. Kowalchuk
rushed the little ape to the Lion Country
animal nursery where a team of vets
"·orked to revive it.
The simiang was held for observation
in the nursery for a couple o( hours,
then returned to its island home, ap-
parently none the worse for its ad·
venture.
The sea lions, according to Lion C<lun·
try officia ls, apparently ignored the en·
tire drama. Apes never go into waler
voluntarily, they noted, and the baby
undoubtedl y tumbled in by accident while
it was cavorting on the bank.
WASHINGTON (AP) -Congressional
leaders announced today a •100,000
reward for Information leading to the
•rrest ud conviction of the person or
persons responsible for the bombing ot
the Senate wing of the Capitol one week
a10.
Senate Republican Leader Hu11t Scott
said the reward money waa posted by
private donors whom he would not iden·
tify .•
Scott and Senate Democratic Leader
Mike Mansfield said the donors volun-
teered to put up the money which bas
been placed in escrow in a bank.
Mansfield said the bank could not be
identified, either.
The reward was ahnounced after House
and Senate leaders met to discuss :i:ecuri·
ty of the Capitol.
M~sfleld said they agreed that the
Capitol police force should be made
fully professional, with no mor e
patronage appointments.
Scott said he was not at liberty to
say whether investigators have any bard
leads in their hunt for whoever placed
a bomb In a men 's room on the first
floor of the Capitol.
The bomb exploded in the early morn·
Ing hours of March I, causing damage
estimated at $300,000. No one was in·
jured.
Mansfield and Scott issued a statement
saying "any person or persons providing
information will be fully protected.
Sources of information will be regarded
as completely confidential.'' 1
They said anyone having information
on the bombing should make it available
to any law enforcement agency or of·
ficial, including local offices of the FBL
Their formal statement said congrts·
sional leaders "have been advised that
the money has been made available
by private sources."
Scott, J\-1ansfleld, House Speaker Carl
Albert (o.-Okla.), Rep. Hale Boggs (l)..
La.). and Gerald R. Ford (R·Mich.),
the House majority and minority leaders;
and Sen. Allen Ellender (D·La.), the
Senate president pro-tern, all signed tbe
reward announceme nt.
Scott said at the conference on capitol
security, congressional leaders also
agreed to have police and their sergeants
at arms make new recommendations
on security procedures, including the
hours the building will beopen to the
public.
Viejo Man Held
By Texas Police
On Pot Charges
SAN ANTONJO Tex. (UPI) -Police
confiscated $1 ,500 worth of marijuana
Supervisors decided extra caution was and arrested three persons, including
\vorth $8.000 last week when Supervisor Scubll Diver a ?ttission Viejo man. Sunday on a
Ronald Caspers challenged a decision highway east of San Antonio.
of a week ago lo place pickets closer Texas highway patrolmen Jar 1e1
together on the Dana Point Quay Wall Bel;ev ed De-· J Fielding aad Don Thompson curbed aa
handrail. " tu.i automobile \\.'hich sped through their
The job estimated to cost $269.09'.! radar trap. The officers said the three
was upped to $277,092 when the board A scuba diver missing off Catallna persons inside the car began acting
voted to have the pickets five inches Island Sunday is presumed drowned to-suspiciously so Fielding and Thompson
apart instead of-nine inchei. day and lhe Coast Guard search bas searched the vehicle. Their search turned
Caspers, abseot ~st week ·when the been called ofr. up, {hey clilnr;l!-one:pound-packets cf
decision was made said he had ex· The diver, identified as Dennis Holpes high grade marijuana valued a~ $1,500.
You may have watched America's perimented with small children anrl of Downey . left the private boat Esceria The three were charged with posses·
astronauts plant Old Glory on the moon spaces between pickets and I.hough! nine v."ith enough for about an hour 's dive sion of marijuana and jailed. Additiona l
via home television but you won't get inches was sale. Sunday morning, but failed to return . charges were expected to be filed today .
similar treatment for the heralded There are 2.6 miles of guay wall A Coast Guard SJXlkesman said a The three were identified as Elmer
"Fight of the Century" from New York handrails and 69,106 square feet of con· search was conducted from Bird Rock Dwayne Harper. 22. of Atlanta, Ga.;
City tonight. crete walkways in the Dana Har bor lo the ~·est end of the island until Danny Knight. 20, of Auburn, Ga.; and
Home television is blacked out this project. darkness force4 searchers to give up. James Derosby, 22, Qf Mission Viejo.
evening when t"·o prize fighters known 1~--------------------'------'----''--------'---'------''-
as ''Smokin ' Joe" Frazier and Muham·
mad "The Mouth" Ali battle it out
at 7:30 p.m. ou r time for the undisputed
heavyweight championship of the world.
Radio, too, has had il.!l y,·ires chopped
at r!ngslt\~.
There is one exception wberein a
round ·by·round recap of what's just hap-
pened will be broadcast from a powerful
little multi-watter station situated in
beautiful downtown Burbank.
Station KBBQ of Burbank wilt slart
broadcas ting pre·fi ght dope tonight at
7:05 o'clock and then a\ 7:30 begin
recapping each round as Frazier and
Ali go at it in 1.1adison Square Garden.
tAll th~ corn&s aboul because KBBQ.
is a member ()f the Mutual Network
'''hich hes a special line in at ringside.
They didn't get it without a court fight
first before the real fight.
Admittedly, this isn't going to be the
perfect solution for blacked-<>ut Southern
Californians.
"Our signal Is a bit difficult to pick
up ," a KBBQ spokesman admitted to
the DAILY PILOT . today , "We ha ve
a six·tower pattern but we ha ve lo
weaken our si1nal down your way to
protect a Mexi can station."
To clarify the technical talk, the KBBQ
spokesman suggests fight followers can
tune them in at 1500 on the AM dlil
-"Just to the left of KPOL at 1540."
For fight fanatics who just 'cBl'l't
fathom all th is. there is al"·ayg the
closed-<'lrcult tr.levislon In theaters and
auditoriums somewhere near you. Fifteen
bucks a seat for the black·and·whlte
pic ture and If you insist nn color video,
the seat scile ls $25, $20, SIS and •10.
Of course, at those prices you run
the risk one of the principals ml1ht
faint during Round 2 or m~bt even
during pre·fiaht lnst.ructlons.
r,
..
CASH
LOANS·
"OLDEST AND EASIEST
WAY TO BORROW''
Borrow from $5 to $I 00, ani:I
more, INSTANTLY. No red
tape, no credit chec~s. All you
need i5 an item Jor collateral.
NO EXLANATIOl>r NECESSARY.
All LOANS CONFIDENTIAL
•Fast •Friendly • Convenient
• Come in and SH what we
offer our custom•"· A new
and unusual experience In
in s h o p p I n g enjoyment.
Where people in the know
save money every time they
buy.
1002 ITEMS FOR YOU TO SELECT FROM • FIND IT HERE FIRST
' (
COSTA MESA JEWELRv····and LOAN
LOAN, IUY, SIU, TV.DE
1838 NEWPORT-8LVD• PHONE 646·774 • DOWNTOWN COST A MESA -B•-• H1rbor & Bto•dw1y
'
I
20 DAILY PILOT
LEGAL NOTICE
LEGA~ NOTICE
.OTICI! TO CllEDIT'Oltl SU~•llOll COUllT 0' TME
SC Monday, Match 8, 1971
LEGAL N"11CE
LEGAL NO'l1CE
STATli 01' CALl,OllMIA 1'011 1'-2111
TH£ COUNTY 01' Olt.AN~E l'ICTITIOUI •USINl!SS Ne. 4""42S NAMll STATIMINT
E 1t111 Of HARLOW E R Tile followlng Hr-.,.
BILL INGSLEY, 0fCllwd, b,,.lroest t••
... OTICI!! IS HERE&'( GIVEN 10 1114 NU-U, 201 Ml•IM Avt~
CrfdllDl"S ol ~ lbovl Mmed df.Cedlill hllllCI, (11lforllll.
111411 tit !lerw<IJ ll1vfnt clelms -.1r11tl Ltwl1 G. !(!.,,, .iot HeUot'°"' Avl,. •be llld IKf'Mnl lrt reQUl..cl to 1119 (or-dfl Mir, C1111or1111.
lflwn, wllll !ht' nee.us.err vOl.l<N<t. lt1 H. A. Sc:1Mom,,..r11au1. ~ "•llot•-
11\t ollla 01 the cltork 01 """ 1llootle Av• •• ""-Otl M¥, c11111offri1. Otltllltd COU<I, or lo ,,._, tl\tm wllll Ltwl1 G. Kl"'
,,,. __ ,., • vovcllers, fO ' 111 e Thlt OUtlt'lttt 11 1»11111 ~\o<.lll<d ,.,
und1rsl11Md 1t lht ornc11 of HARWOOD. 1 oort,..rshlP
SODEN & AOIONSON, no N-POrl Put>Mlhed Otlflll• CO<l•I 0.11, Pltol,
C•nlrr Otlvr. Sull• 0-1, NrwPOM 11r1ch. Ftbtu1ry t2, Ml•ch 1, L u. 1'71 3lt-71
C1!llo<"l1, whldl 11 tlie PIKI crl by1hlfl•)---------'-'---'---) et r11e u...t1u1entc1 lt1 111 .... ne.1 LEGAL NOTICE
' '.
11erl1lnl1111 lo tM Hl111 of u.id ~nt, w11111,, loor m11ntlll 1111r tilt Ural -.illllcllion "' lllls notlct. L••AL NOTICE DllfCI F.t>ruarv lt, lt71 NOTICE IS tlEllEllV GIVE N rl\11
BANK OF AMERICA Ill• lo11owl ... "-· of loul\d or WVfCI NATIONAL TRUST AND Pl'OOff1~ lla<tt beltll held bY tilt Police
NEW OPEL 1900 FOUR,OOOR SEDAN MAKES APPERANCE
Buick Dealers Displ1ying New Version of Import
SAVINGS ASSOCIATION OtP•rlmtfll of lllr City ot Cos!t Mtll EX~UIOI' et 11M1 Wiil ot for I MtloO I" l~trH of nlnt!J (1101
the 1bowt "'"""' dece<lt<ll d1v1· NAllWl)C)O, SODEN .. ADKINSON Thr@e blue blk11, -bl1c~ Wl11tl,
Pwl Ollk1 ••• 1H7 -wr~I w1ldl. N __ , lltKh, Ct. tl .. l NOTICE IS l'"UllTHEll GIVEN !hit
In High Gear
Ttl• (714) .,.4-llll II no owMr lllMlfl 1<><1 11rown 1\15
A110 ..... y1 "" El.CU!Or OWMrllliP of !ht 1.--rtv Wllllln lt~tf'I
Pllb!lth ... Or1n111 Co1i1 Q,llY PllOI (" <11ys lollcwln11 !ht Publltlllofl ol
Ftbr111ry 7t Mirth 1, 1, \S, lfll J95 11 11111 Nulict lllt !lllr lhtrt!O Jf\111 vtil --------------l lt1 Ille finclrr, It thrr1 bo one. Dr LEGAL NOTICE 1,. rne city 01 cos11 Mete. 1t1 w111ch ---~----------)CISI I~ Pr-ly 11\all ~ told 11 Pllblk 11/CClloft ti I ti-lf'ld Clll•
NOTICE INYlllNG ltDS 10 boo IMOUJ'ICf<I.
Notlct 11 herrbt' 9tvet1 11111 !ht BCMlrd O.t.TEO: Mire~ t, lt11 ol Tru1lttt o! lhe CO<l•I CG1'1im11t1llY R. E. NETH
CoOtt• Oi1trlcl ol Oflf'lgt County, CHIEF OF POLICE C1lllornl1, wlll ~crlvt •tO!od b101 up Puoli1hed Or•nee Co151 ball, Pllnl,
10 11 :0G 1.m., Tuei.a1Y. M1re11 JJ, n11."c""::c"c"c':'C"c'c' _______ c~:::''~" 11 !ht Purella•l1111 Oe<>t. O'I s1lct Kl>DPl1
dlS!rld 10c1tf<I 11 ll10 Aa1m1 Avtn11t. LEGAL NOTICE
COii• Mtu, C•Utornl1, 11 Wf\!(11 llm1" ------~~-----Sll<I bla1 wiH be PUbllcl'I' Ollt!nf<I •NII
r16d lor: LEASE-PURCHASE 011: c•SH P'..ff5" PURCHASE OF ONE COLIJ,TOR FOii CEllTl,ICATE 0, IUSINESS
COLOEN WEST COLLEGE. FICTITIOUS NAME "'II bld1 1rt to be lt1 accorda"ct TM uflde~ltr.e<I does certify h1 11 with Ille ln11tuctlons llld Con<IU1on5 Ind Cllndudlny I b<l1lne11 II P,O. Ila• fo\52,
SPl'Clflca•lon1 whlell 1rt now on lilt lrvlllt. Calll, tJ64<, unatr lllf llctil!Du1
end mtY boo \fCUrf<I l" !tie ofllct il'.m n1mt ol TECHNl.(ON 11>11 11111
of rhe Pu•dMsine Al'fnt ol Hid school s11a firm Is <amJ101td of tne lollowl"11 <listrlct, ~.,,Dl'I, WhO'lt P\tlme In full 1r>lll place
EKh bioae~ mu" 1ubmit with 1111 ol rtsidtnce 11 11 loU-1:
bid • c1.,,ier'~ chtc~. crrt>ftr.1 chec-. Mlchilrl C. Oenll""'r, 1511 Mlr..,,1r
O' bldffr'1 bo<w1 midi pty~ 4-1119 Dr .• Balbt>I'., Ctlll,
order of Ille CCMISI Commu"llY Coll~• 01lt<fFib7i.i1ry lf. ltn
Ol1trlcl Bwrd cf Truitre1 lf'I 1n amoun! M. C. Dtnll1>9er
l>OI ltH lll~n ffvt Ptrcent (S°"l ol STATE OF CALIFORNIA,
lht 1um bid at • ~u1rit1tee tht1 me OllANGf COUNTY: blllOe• will r<i!er Into mt pr0001td On FrbtuatY 11. 1911, b<!IOrt -·
Conlrttl If 11\t ''""' 11 awarded lo I Nol1rv Publlt '" Ind kl• Hl<I S!llt,
hi"'. In the oven! ol 1111.,ro ro ffllt• "''"""•11Y •POe••"' Mkh•tl C. O..nlln11tr
Into •uch conlflcl, mt PfO<""I of Mn<iwn 10 me lD M Tilt lle!'lan -fl\e tnt<k Wiii be lorlrl!rd. or 1n llw n11me Is •ubicrlbe<I lo IN. Wll!lln ca~ ol 1 bond, lho lull tum thereof, lntlrumt<>I """ 1ckn<iwle<19fCI ho tXKUlr.1
will be torleill!'d lo wold school di•Ul(I, lllf Mamo. No bidder mlY wl1hdriw Ml bid to• (OFFICIAL SEAL! ~ period o! forl•·llvr !IS) da•s tlttb• H. C1nt11l homollme1 llll 1fter 1ne d•I• >ti for No.1J1rv Publlc • C1Utornl1 !he -nlnjl mtreol Ptinc:lpal Oilier In
Tne txNird of Tri.s1ee1 ••serve. '"' Or1fl!le C01,1t1h
1>dYlle9t of reietllfl!I 1t1v ""' all bldl My Comm!11lan E•Plrrs or to w1lve 1n• lrrf9ul1rltlrs .,, 1... . SePI. H, nn lorm1Utl•• In '"' bid Cf lf'I I~ blddlne. PuOl .. ht<I o ..... , Cot•! O•U• Pllol
°"'"'March 73, 1tn . ll:Oll '·"'· Frtlruarv '2, M1rcll I, I. 15. 1911 ll6·11
Signed: NORMAN E. WATSON LEGAL NOTICE 5t<!v. Bc••d of Tru1let1 Puhll11>ed O••n11e Co.Ill 011IY Pi10•,1------7ccc---'='---M1rch I, 15, 1911 S01·11 P' .... Hll
LEGAL NOTJCE
CERTIFICATE 01'" IUSINESt FICTtTITOUS HAMii!:
Thf 1111Grr1ltrwd do crrllrv 11\fY 1r1
NOTICE OF MARSHAL'S $ALE tcmlucllnt • bu•IM.U 11 11•l Newport Ni. i.s us Avenue, Cc1ta Ml!wo. Calllort1l1, under
Mollvwood 011 Coml>flnv. Pltln!ltf .,. !ht lktlt!ou• llrm t1ame ol MESA PAWN
Srronen w. Bradlo•d, Oelendan!, · ind !h.•f said firm Is com11CSed cl
B• vl•lut ol an e~ecu!lon J"uf<I "" !hf IDllDWl"9 Pf'rM>n" W~lt n1me1 In F•t>ru1rv 17. 1911 by tne Municipal ~::....,~'."" Pl•cu of re11de"cr ire It
Court. DI C11Uornl1, Countv at loo A 1~ lintt~• lor>11 lle1c!'I Judlc!il Oh rrkt ' ur VP.tduU, 3600 . Sr• •ho • I , ' I I ' NtwDCrt Be1c11, C1lllOl't111. upcn I u<IQmtfll t<'lle•r.1 ti livor of Wl~ron Verdul!, 1591 Tutlin Avt.,
tlollvwood 011 C""'o•n• Ii l11d9n·11nl Ccsll Mts1, Ctlltornl•. crealtor and ag~!"•I S!Hinrt1 W Brad/l)l'd o.ir.i Feb'""" 1t.l•11 a• IU<19ment deb!or, •hcwln9 a ~t ArThur Vetdul~
ba1,.nc~ ol Sl.711,01 a<1ut1i. avt otl w1ns1o" Joseon Ve•d\111
'"Id 111dgmeM on In• dltr of l!lr St.:it, ol Califor"lt, Oranvt Coon!•• 1uuanct OI $81d •>KUlllW!, I have levied 0!'1 Frbr111rv 1t, 1t1!, l>elDt' me,
uo>on 111 rne rltlll, llUe Ind lnlt •••f 1 No•arv Public: In 1<><1 tot u id S1111,
o• .,Id l\ldtmtftl orbfor In lilt PtOPerlY Mr,.,,...lly ll>Pt•rtd Ar111ur verdull .,,.,
!n !hf Coon1v of OtlrtGf, St•lt of W!n11on Vtodu1! k.-n 10 me 1 be
C1lllDrt1l1, desc'1be<I •• fe llows: Ille p1rwr11 wl'loM """" •~ •ul>IC~ibrd Lot 7~. Tr1c1 901. Bnc• o! Maos, to Ille within r"slr»Nlfnl 1 )r a P~91S 1~ In !ht C""ntv ol Or1M•. •c~nowledAed ·~e'r DKUled tf'I ..... Slate ol Ca!lforn11 lfld toca!!!d II: !OFFICIAL SEAL) r e, ns VII lido Sou<!, NfWPOrl Buch, Miry Be!ll MMIO!'I
Call!ornl• Not1nr P110l lc-C1lllorn\1 ,_OTICE IS MEllEBY GIVEN 1!11! PrlnclPll O!llc1 I"
en Tvesdav, MlfCh JO, 1911 , ,i 10 00 O•an\N' (O\lnlV
o'clock A.M. II ''°"' c~ • Cour.ll>Ouie. Mv commlnlOP E••I••• 5e1 WU! ll•n S!retl. C1!~ Co1!1 AP•ll t . 1t71
Mr11. Cal!lornla. Cout11V al Otl"'lt, Sta!t PUDll!ht<I Orange CCMISI Odll'r P1lol cl C1IUorn11. 1. wlll '~II U public Ftbr111rv 72, Mtrch I, t, u. 1911 l'13·71
t u<llO" lo !he h1o~e!I D!adtr. lor c11•h
lf'I 111wt11I rnoMtY of th• Unll•d St11101. LEGAL NOTICE
all I~• rlgll!, !Ille •"" lnternt o• --------------•aid ludemenl deblGt in th• allflve d•Krl!:>l!'d orQ<>f•!Y, o• "' mur~ therl'Of P'""fll1
I f mll .. bt nec••Slln' lo s•liJIY Slill CER TIFICATE 0, •USINl!SS ''~cullo~, with 1ccrllfll lnrtrest 1nO FICTITIOUS MAME coll! Thr und,.,,lotlld don certify hr Is
D•tr.1 11 Coll• M•••· C1ll!or11l1. March ccnducllfl!I • IPlrline.1 at lolCJ Oel1w1re (, 1911. S!r11tl. Hunlifl!l!on Brien. Ca11fornl1.
OILLARO 0 . W!ll(lll.$0,_. Undlr I~• l!C!lllOUI flrm "1me ol Hl-0·
N.at1hll PRODUCTS and lhll 11id !!rm 11 Mun!cio~l Covr1 , <O"'"""ed ol In' IDllowl"9 Ptr:IGn, wh01e
Or•nte Coun•v "•mt In tvtl Ind 11l1c1 of residence ~ltbor Judlclll 01,,ri<I I) I S loll-5:
By C ..... GOOdwln, ll:IChlfd S. Vour19, 1•1 ~l1w1r1 Se<oPtnl srrert, H11n1.,...,1on B~•<ll, Catifor11i1.
"'ICM-ELG. NOTT Otlr.I FtOl"utrv 1•. lt1l Plll"IUl's AMar,..y R;C)lard S. V011n9
110 E. o.c .. n BIVO., Suitt 1000 S!•le of Catilorn/1, Or1n11e COU!'lhl '
L°"' 1111c~, C1Ufornl1 fOIOl O~ February 18, 1'11, bl!!Ort mp, P~alis~ed Drano' CD11I 01i1v P l!OI I Notary PuDllC In lml !Cir wld S!B11.
March 1. !J, 22. 1t11 .SOS-II ""'""'allv 1opr1rt<I ll:lch1rd i , Vount >.nown lo mr ro bt Ille peaon wno1e
LEGAL NOTICE "'"'' h wb1<rlblld to !he wllhln 0~~=·-----~~-=' )lnil<ll"'ttll In<' te>.now!fd'llr.I !If tllffUlrd
-.c lhr '"""'· ccfiT.C MESA---SAIUTAltT OIS'TltlC-T !OFFICTAl S"E"".lll
011.ANt:;O: COUHTT. CAl.tl<Oll NI... Marv 8t!h Morron NOTICE INVITING IJOS Ncliry Publl<·Ca!l!ornla NOllCE IS HER EBY GIVEN l~at Ptlnc11>al Olllci In
lO~lt<I oro1>11•~I~ Wiii "" '"''Ive<! bv O'"n<I' CO\lnh
lh• City Cle•-· on bthall al !ht Co•!• MY Comml11!on E•PI~
Mts• Sa"ll1N Ol!!tl{I, It ntr o!llce A,p•il t 1971 !~ !nr Cill' M1ll, n F1lr 0f!Yt. Cos11 Publ•s~d Q,11n91: COOi" O•llV P,lot
Meu, Calllor!'l!A. un!ll 1111 l>o<Jr ol 11 ll'J FtOruary ,7, M.itrclo I. I, 1,1, ltl1 :111·11
LEGAL NOTICE
1 m. C" tne '"" dir ot -.oril, 1911, 11 which !imt rh•v will bf' c<>•nl'<I
PVllllCIY 11\d te~d ~lo!J(I I" lhe (""nr'I dl•ml>e•• tor FUllNISHtNG Alt. LABOR)--~~----------)
ANO MATER IALS FOii: THE CON· NOTICE 01' SHEltll'l'"'S SALE ~Tli!UCTION OF SANITll RY SEWER DONA.LO f . DUNCAN, Pltln!lll ~1. MAIN IN NATIONAL AVE,.lJE., OAK JOHN W, Oll:YOEN, rte .. Off!Ondanl.
SlltEET ANO FEDERAL "'VENUE FOii • Ht . HHU ,RESIDENT PUMPI NG STATION. Bv v1t111r cf 1n exttutioll lssut<I on
A 1et ot plat11. IP"'Cil1c•li0nl 1nd ,5 Jlf'IUI ..... \ti! Ir/' the SUH•lot Court.
(lt her cDt1l••cl <1oc:umr"t1 m•.. be Ob-Countv of LOI """1101. Sllle of l•ined 1t tllt o!lk:r ot !ht Cl!Y Cl••>. C1lllor"!1, 11oon • 1""9me~• entered ~"°" 1 afll>OSll at Sl5.00. A charot In favor of OO'IALO F. DUNCAN IS
of 11.00 w!ll ix mldf If handled bv l1>11Gmtt1l (rf<lilor •'Id a111ln1I JOMN mill. PLEASE MAIL SE P"' RATE W. 011.VOEN. •IMl llllOW'n 11 JOHN (HECl(S. W 011.YOEN. JR .. 11 lud11mffll deblor,
EKh bk! •MU be m1de on t1't prCM>CS•I •ll-l"'f I ntl blll"Ct O'I $1'0.,~.J't
10,.., •"d in tne "'~"ntr 1>rovldf'll it1 acru1llv -on 11ld i""'9mt<>I on !tit
1111! conllCI ooc\lfnt'nl1, 1!1d 1hall be d11t ot !~r l~111n« !ti wid r•rcullon,
i ccompanil!<I bY 1 c•rlilird !If c~""ler'1 I na vt lt>1led 11-Ill !!If 110111, lll!t cnt<~ 11r 1 bid bond !or nol lt•1 BM lnll•rsl cl 11ld 1""9.....,1 dtblor
!nan IO"<I' of tne 1m"""' ol !~• bid, In Ille orPO!!rlv lt1 Ill• C01,1n!y ol Orafl!lt.
made P•Ybblt lo the CD1!a MtSI S1nl!1N Sltlt cl Callf<tr"!I, O!ICflbtd 11 10110'"1· Ohtdtl. LOI• 513 uld 57'. T•~c! 'IOI, So>oM
NOTICE IS fUllT~Elt GIVEN Th•I ''· Pt!IM 1J to .M, Mist. of M•o1. .,,, Boif"lf of Olr<'()OIS 01 l!lf Costa CounlY Recor0tr'1 Office. COlmlY o!
MMa SJ1t1lt1ry Ol,t•!ci has htre1ofl)l't Or1,,.,t. Prllllerl' commorrly k._" 1s rs1111ll!J>l:d 1 1>rfY11llM •1tf 11\d nil• 700 Via IMttttnt. lido tile, Callfornl•.
QI w1on. !n 1ccord....ct wlln '-'"· 10 T-llltr wltfl 111 1<><1 1lneular the
M paid In "" conslructlon ol tt.o tenrments, II r r • d 11" m t ~ 1 t 1/ld
•bovt tnll!ll!<I lmprov1menlt. Th~! t1!d 1pou<1en1"tt1 "'•rru111a be~lng .,.
Curl Carstenien
Buick is now inlroducin& a
new four-door ver sion of its
~Opel 1900 series, providing the
gest assortment of body
pular import was first in-
troduced. according to' 0. F'.
Frost, Buick's general sales
manager.
The 1900 four-door se<l;1n
s tyles o f f e r e d since the
Opel with fo_u r-door cw-
venience and is the ans wer
to n1any dealer requests Tor
a car of this size and design.
The 1900 series, which madt•
ils appearance lhis ye a r ,
features its 01~·n distinctive
styling with longer looking
hoods, wider lread both front
and rear. and poi,1·e r brakes
with front discs as standard
equipment.
Features also includt• on!'-
piece front door wndows .
divided rear door wndows, and
large rear tail lamps and
backup lights with v.·idc rear
window,
F ull coil s prings arC' in front
and rear with a modified
three-link suspension in the
rear, combined and are with
new wider treat.
The sedan is 16~.6 inches
long. three and one-hall inches
longer than the regular Op<'!
two--door sed:in version. It is
64 .3 inches wide. as ccmipared
to 6l.9 in the regular two-door.
and 54.5 inches in height as
compared to 55.4. Th l'
wheelbase. al 95.7, is a half
inch longer than the two-door
sedan.
It is powered by the 1.9
liter engine which has been
equipped with hydrauhc valve
lifter!. for quieter operation.
This engine carries an SAE
rating of 90 gross horsepo.,..er,
and operates efficiently ,.,.ith
lower exhaust emissions on
unleaded or low lead fuels.
The Opel rr.ode ls, which are
built by General r<.1otors 1n
Europe. were introduced in
the United States in 1964 with
sales or approximately 15,000
units the first year. Sinre
then, with some 2,100 Buit:k-
Opel d ealers offering the car~.
sales. \•olume bas rise.n to the
near 90,000 mark,
Since ils introduction. a to1.:i l
of 380,733 Opcls ha ve ~en
sold in the United Stales
through the 1970 calendar
year.
OLDS:\.IOBILE RECORDS
NEW SALES HIGH
Oldsmobile sales during thr
month of February broke all
existing records and pushed
the divisilon's retail delivery
ror tm calendar yenr to .;in
exceptional 36 percent abovf'
the first tv.•o months of 1970.
William Boston, general sales
mana~er announced today.
"Enjoying a very strong
final period" he said, "our
d'!alers retallcd 24..763 new
Oldsmobiles w hring thr.
February total lo ~.658. This
is 11 percent greater than our
rilt lfld ic1le Wll •c!OP11!<1 b1 thr In '"'""''"' IPl'tl'll1Mlnv. • llo•rd o1 o;11xt<>r$ b,. R11a1vncn No, NOTICE 15 HERE8Y GIVEtt 111~1 L~'QAL NOTICE ff.11• ·Oii thr 19111 dlY al ~""' on Turse11v, J) M1rdl ltJl. II~ JQ;QO ~ '""(: • _ ...
it?& "Ml 11 °"' 1111 111 ""' otntr al o'(1ocJt """' 11 Mltl11 L.Olilll\', ~. • • ~ AMlltllnl Sr<;rttlrY, 11 F1lr Ot!we, 100 Civic CCf'ltr Otl"" Vli'nl, Cltv O'I N01'1CE 01' INTENTION TO EHOAOE
Co!lt ~' C1lllO!'~l1. Tt11t iald •1111 Stnt1 it.nt, Coull!' Of Or1ft.ft. Sl11te IN TME SALE 0' ALCOHOLIC
•nd •c•le Ii ...,,,;n rflffr"d IO '"" of c1111cw"1.. I Wiii "Mii •• Public II.VE.AGES •011111... In 11111 nof lcr •• lf>Ovl>h lull• 1uc!lol> lo !IHI hloheit blOOtr. !or <lsll Mite~ 1, ltll
~!'Id comP1t•tlV ~t tcirlh hftf!ln. 1n<1 In 11· .. 1~1 '""""' al the Vnl"'a 51flli. To Vli'llOm II Mlv Concern Illa! ta!d K•I,. I> 100Ptr.I bv u!d •II Ille •lgllt. !Hit tM lnterr., ol Suale<I to !nu1nu 01 the lier~»
,1,01u!lon, 11 m1de 1 "''' of 1~11 •aid luctomt~r dOblo• In Int 1bcve 1i>ollr.I lor. nolltt h llt•ebY qiven l!'IJ1 Mlle• bv ·~•tttM(f, deKrlbr.I PfOPtrlV. or tG m<)(h lheriret •lwl Utlll~•alOntd pr111101e1 10 1e11 •IC!lflOllt
Tne (Qtl!ractor &1111U, '" th f 11 mey bl l\tCtllln' IO "lilly 11!0 blver80f1 11 lllt Ptt,..l•e>, d11trlbtcl flt•IO•mt~Ct al "'' w<lr'lc •NJ """ ••KvUClt'I. wllh Kcrv... !nllf•" •llCI •• !011~: P•oY•mrnt•, (0trl0tm to "'' lll!Or Coat cas11. !l'M Soul!! Co.111 11¥d. U1111~• B""eh o1 the alllt DI C111!Mnl1 Ind e!Mr 0.tf'd II 51n11 Af'll, C1lifO'nl1. •unuinl IQ ,lldl lnttt1UOP. t~ utl·
previous record for the month
eslabhshed 1n 1965 " Noting
I.hat demand was part1cularly
s trong for Oldsmobile's full
size C3rs, Buxl<ln reported
lffo1aey's 11'01•th
t:a~h was in your house o n
any one day , or proving lhe
precise cost of Jev.•els you
bought ur were given as girts
Jlcads Truckers
\tW\ ol t11d stilt, 111~l1c•blt! ltlt•tlo, Frbr .. 1r"r JI, lt71 -•ifl'flt<I 11 ••l'l'i.,. ta ll'tt Ot'ot•lmt"'
..,1111 1111 e•c~tlon only o1 1uc11 ¥1•1111on• JAMES A, MUS•C.K. ot AIC(ll!Ollc ,,...,,,_. ronirM •or H • fHob•'el Sm•'th has ,, m•Y Ill" '""""""' ..,,.,.. the -.:111 Shtrllt·CorOtltl' 111u1nq bY 1r1111ltr ol '" 11co»o1lc • "· i l1!u!t$ PU<1vfn! Ill whlcn OroceedlMI Count\> oi Or~~ .... C11lto1t1!S beverl9t llttn\# !Ot t!cttllts) 111' lhfff b('('n named aeneral SaJeS N'•PYnd~• 1r• flktfl tnd wn!ch ~•vt BY c. A. llndltl, Oftm1~· f l lol!oWI e nat """ tuHrsf'dt<I hv lh• Drovl1lll!'t 0111u1. ON SALE Bl!E R & w1,.E «IOI'~ manager for Smith Tool Com·
ol l!lil t.lbOI' cooo. '"•l•rr··~· IO l•bOr llULOI", llDLSfON, rldt Pub)lc ElllnP "l•tt! ., ,11111 111 ;i....,, "".., In ,~, m•l'lll4'r eu11N1 • McK1ttt11c1< ""'..-d!!lirln~ 10 ••01ts1 1n, 11w•"'" pany, J was announced today ~~~;r..:;:; ~.n u.e fll'\tv ""' ::,1·:i~::;:~. s111i. * :.oi~ ....,~~r;:i!~ic';';; ,'::.' 0: ... ~~1!,';' by Dale Boyer, president, at
m1n11fKIUrrd mJ11f'•l1l1 •toduad In "" •••trtY NIU\, C.Hltnlll toJJI " AICOllO!k '-'"' C:OPltOI, within the Compton headquarters or
tJn!IM Slttn 111(1 Cini• m1t1ul1t1urtd Pu1!111""' N-11 Mlrtlor N"J P~it :Ill lllYI o1 lht dtlt TM D<~ lfHllL ... 1 .,. the Oil (OOI firm m•1tr1t1~ mttlUlf{IUffll In !ht Ut1lltd (Ol'!'IOtMd IWllfl OtllJ' PllOt, N-POll .,.,,.. llr$1 -19(1. lllllnt 1rouncli !Of •
Sltles. 1ub1!1nll1llY ... lrcttn mthl•l•lt h•Cll· C:tlll'O•nl1 Ml•cn I, •• 1S. "11 ClfJ'lllt ., 1rcw1d.a b1 11 .... Thr ... , ... ,,... Smith was pre ... 1 0 us I \I crO"ll!Ctd In IM U"!l'd Sl1le1, lt1 IN' •1-1.fl IN now llftf'ltrd f11r t~t HI~ ol 1te(lllo!!c ./ tHlrfor"'ttl(' ~ ltii ell!'t1r11:1. be'ffl'ttr•. Th, klrm a1 , ..... 1uc.rlllfl m8v domestic sales manager for
Na bit wu 111 con1l"'rf0 lll'lln1 111 ob111"rcr ''°"' 1nY o•nc1 ot "'• ""lroleum marke'• in .-. U S u 11 111Ht on 1 bl111l form 1urn1.,,rcr Otoittrnfnt, .,... .., uit:: , •
bY ""' ~111 """"' !•~11.,.... 0 111•1et KIDS LOVE LOEwCNGUTM. Eldr.r<1" H. and Canada. He will now head ..... ,, -"' K COl'dtna •ll!I tl'lf O'tOHNl!!LL. 01nlf:I ~ ( ' ptOVIJloM ol 11\t trwolll r(i'tl\tfr-1$. P1111l111'11Ct 0.•1191 COlsf 0••11 Piiot Up all llSP'!ciS Of !Qlt!, J.n.
E11:11 1111Jder mu.t tit lk"'* '"" M•t'(ll •· "71 jfJ.n eluding ~1roieum nnd min•'ng
1110 11""'"•1111@0 ~ rl'OU1~ n. ttw. UN CLE LEN •• " .,.~, 1a1r<1 n1 01~to., oi 1~. coo• 1 ~ '4 and industrial product.! for
Mt•• l1n\11r• Ohlf!Ct ltwfYrJ !tit ... hi ~ bo h f ' nd d ' to l'llKI .".,. Ot 111 llld•. 1,000'• JI'"'. OIL-rAINTINGS l orc1gn a omest1c
01i.i: '9\~rc~ l. 1•11 s t d . WHO llSAl.I WARIHOUSI markets '!:',':!,:~r""'" a ur nys 1n or1N to fHI ru1uc 11. A.· Smilh lives with his
8Y ORO!!" 01' THE 50"' OFF l'O.t.1100fl 0111EcTo•• The DAILY PILOT 10 v.·1fc. Jacqueline, and children, ~"1~:"~os~~sr'i~~~. ''" 1-. l!DINGE•. SANTA AMA T amara. Craig. 3nd Traci, at
l"vhHt...o Or1n11 C111it O.llY l'Ho• 1 l"lltfl• 11,....,... 1913 Galaxy Drive, Newport
M••cll s ••• "" "''11 • Oil!•LlltS WANTl'P ... B h c~c .
Complete-New Y Qrk Stock List
!
)
•
•
':a,ansonata' Program
Youth Ballet Impressive in Mesa
DAILY 'ILOT llllf ,IM!t
Ry TC'l~l RARLEY 01 tM D•)'1' .. !!ti 11tH
11lis critic needs very little
perl'luaslon to abandon hil'I
Saturday gardening in ravor
-0( an aflernoon or ballet but
it was with particul11r interest
that 1,1•e put do1,1•n the tr-0wel
last we<!kcnd and headed for
t :osta f..lesa High School and
l heNewportB11Jlet's
''Dansonata'' program.
What's Up, Doc?
We had }leard many im·
prcssive things about !his
young ballet enterprise and
the quality of the performers
being proce~cd at its ap·
prcntic:e 1,1·orkshop but this
was our first real opportunity
in a hectic musical season
In personall y assess the pro-
cess of artislic direclor Mona
Physicians '''illiam Verderber (l eft) and James
~1cKic examine Hal l.a.ndon J r. in a scene from
South Coa st Repertory's comedy '"The Imaginary
·Invalid," playing Friday and Saturday nights in
·SCR's do\vntov.•n Costa A-1esa Theater. ---.. f'rances. . .
JV DAILY LOG
If the varied and cleverly
paced program we enjoyed 1s
to be our criterion of the
Newport Ballers stature in
the dance world lhen all we
Monday
Evening
MARCH 8
1:00 fJ 11f """' l•rrJ Dunph1.
B J.NI C NtwMrvlce lom Snyt!e1.
0 TM All•• Sho.t
0 JACK LEMMON·"UNOER
*THE YUM YUM TREE"
PAllTl-IN COLOR!
0 Sil O'Clod. MIWit (C) (90)
"\Jncltr llM Yu111 Tu111 Tree" P1rt I
(comf.dy) '63-Jatk temmon. Carol
ll'!l1ey, [d1m Adams. Ptul l1nd1.
Two people in lov1 •Rret lo ltsl
thtlr U11r1cter compat1b1!lty by liw.
Inc lo1ethtr pltt1111ic1lly. and lhtir
landlord tttempls to undermine th•
lest by m1kin1 lovt to the 1ir1.
0 Dk:' Vi n Oyli1 m Tiit fllnb1ones
(D @(ll Stir T1K
ell) Mufllnltnd "The Own:
(ID Flshlr F1mltr m Noticltrt 34
€t' Wfnp to Adwrrtu11
ml La Hon F1m!1!1r ctn Consotlt
Cf) kPLM Ntn
1:1 5 ED Ar1 Stllllit
I ~ can say is !hat our earlier
and C1•l1 to 1iY1 up thei1 din-intelligence had gr 11s~1 y
1uous p1stimts. underestimated the caliber of
IJHYPO
O @ (l) a> The Ritt ''"'' Jack Barry hostl. Guest celebrity Is J1d!
Btnny. m Dnid Frost Show Gue,h: Co"·
ni. Sl1'o'tn1, Mtlt"it, l~inr C1e5ar.
m '''°"' 5'1u1d m l"•tt«n ,,, tifi111
tml Mltutli1t Valdu Siio•
the organization.
It has several young dancers
of distinct promise and it has
one young artili't who should
be snapped up immediately
hy any professional com pany
interested enough lo take in
her work in two very clever
ballets offered by the group
-"Twfl Oanees for Foor and
l :OO D Ci:J()lMt,tltnJ 111.f.D. Sam Three'' ;ind "Amoeba Oh." by
lits J\11 10n. M1k1, bu1 '" old tar far !he best th ing on a very
from Goobt1, and !lie boy runs entertaining program.
111111 into t1ouble. Patsy Williams is the most
tiJ 12) (I) gr;, Wor1d l'l1111ltr1 promising young ballerina to
Mo'lit {t) (2 ~r) '"V1nilhld" P1rt come our 1,1·ay in a long time
I (drama) '70 -Rithird Wldm1rk, and her work Saturda y can
Robert You~1. EJe1~r Puker. Rlth· 1rd Widmark s1rrs a1 th• Presid1nl only leave us with the con·
o! the United st1tu-Paul Roude· clu.~ion that her da\•S al the
bu1h--1n a drama of Washinrto11 Newpori Ballet arc 'limited if
political inlriiut involvin1 th• m)"· this [inc young dancer has
t1ri011s di!o&ppear ant1 ot the Pnsi· her sights set on ballet stages
dent's top 1dviur and closest of a higher strata.
friend. In ~n 1d1pt11ion of fletchei Jr the splendid Palsy wasn't
Knebtl'• be1t-selll111 novel. T\!iss Frances' pride and joy
0 Tht Fu11tlw1 before this interesting pro-
0 @(])€£)Alt MondaJ Mo't'it gram gnf under way she must
(C) (1 hr) "MvlinJ" the l ounty"' h;:ive been by lhe i;nnclusion
Part II (dr1m1) '62-M_irlon Bra"· of lhe highly entertaining
do. lrnor Howtrd. T1rit1. An 1plc '·Rehr;:irs;:il'' -an rxercise
1111 of mutiny on tlle hlth seas. 00 score by Pnulrnt', cleverly
choreographed by MI s s several blllels that we v.·ould ::in organization that has Frances~herse.lL like lo see performed at a brought some fine young male
She had won her laurels hlghi?r1evel --.'Amoeha Oh," artists to the ballet world.
long be:fnre that. however, most certainly. \\'ell done. Miss Frances:
with !'lnme inspired d11ncing ll was 1,1·ith great regrel you and your dancers are to
in the beaulifully staged that 'A'e noted the absence be congratulated on your
"Amoeba Oh" and the clever· of male tfancers in the splendid "Dansonata." But do
Jy danced .. Two Dances." "Dansonata"' program. It will not. if you can avoid It, limit I
Miss Williams brought poise be evl!n more regrettable if your offerings to the ballerina
and grace to bot h ballets and this omission rcnect.s a lack :---the male has his place
an inborn improvisation in of interest among the young in ballet and no ballet pro·
several movements that can male~ of the Harbor Area and gram is really c em p I et e
not have escape<I M Is s we can only poinL .In. the ~itbou~ his b a I an c in g
franl.-es' attention. And, thank ,,..La~g~u~n~aiiiiBe~•iiciihiiCiiiii'iiiciiiiBiiaiilloiiliiaiisiiii~piirniisiioiiniicoii.iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii,..iiii
the Lord, she delightfully at·
lends to something that many
ballerinas overlook in the heat
and swirl of the dan~ -
the smile. the dazzling smile
that should be there on the
ballet stage even if you're
executing your grand Jele with
a broken ankle.
on tMe
Peninsula
67~
Open 6:4S p.m.
But do not let lhis attention
lo the brilliant Mis~ Williams
be construed as an implication
that the work of her com-
panions in this charming pro-
gram was far below the level
of this exceptional young
artist.
Plus
This 2nd
GREAT
FEATURE
On the contrary, Mi li s
f'rances has far more ~wans l"'""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""!"""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""""I\
than geese in a company that
worked very hard Saturday
and wiLh great success in an
ambitious program that would
have taxed the resources of
ballet organizations with much
more impressive statistics in
!he payroll and personnel
divisions.
flilloah Minder and Linda
Smith caught this critic's eye
on more t.han one occasion.
the former dancer, pa~ticular·
ly, for her fine solo work
in Tchaikowsky"s "Spanish
Dance."
Miss Smith put in some very
dedicated dancing in "Amoeba
Oh" and ''Two Dances"' and
we particularly enjoyed her
cleverly executed routines in
the second movement of the
latter ballet. She had to lake
second place to a brilliant
Miss Williams, 10 be sure,
but !l was a most distinguish·
ed runner-up spot.
GEORGE C. SCOTT
Academy Award Nominee
for Best Actor in 'Patton'
... now in a delightfully
different role!
Wh en they reach out
'
for each other ...
they touch
every heart
... with warmth,
charm. and
laughter!
l:SO 0 Ctndld C..111111 m Tiit R)'lnt Nu11
Q) ! lflC1ij; I Tht Ma~int 11 "Tori! -,----------ii
T1rt! Ttt1!" Tht stoiy of P11rf
H1rbor 11 told by men who too~
111rt. Bill Burrlld whlls with Com·
m1rtder Milsuo Futh ida, th1 J1p1n-
e.se mmmartdef who led the alt1t•
and Comm1ndef Minoru G1nd1, lilt
s1r1te111t who planned th• 1urprisf
altttk.
Miss Frances pi cked her
program and paced her young
dancers most capably and
,:tavr us. in the proces~.
, Joanne
. ~C./\\bod~llrd
tD Hod11pod11 Led11
€?!) Stltdtd Fltm1/MuMttl1
m Tite Duert Rt!IMt
CE tat OMd1dos
Ei)ABCN""'
7:00 IJ CIS Nws Walter Cran'llll.
Cl m NBC News Drvid Blin°fjcy,
John Ch~nc!llor, Frink MtGH.
0 \'Vh1t'1 My Llnt? m @ rJ) I Lov1 tucy
m Dr11net
ED Tht World Wt llw1 In "Animal
Commu~1tJl 10ft.'' Thi 11'.lUftdl ut-
tered by th1 mD1. u1c~etJ '"d
th\c~en1 1llu11r1T1 1Me lncr1dlbl1
¥1 riety 1nd 1ubtltTy of tnlmtl calll·
mu"1t1tion1.
fl) ll11litits "Dtvid lean: A Self·
Portrait." lht Atadtmy 1w1rd·win·
nlnr dirtetor talk.I t bol.lt his meth·
!Id of workins. how 111 be11n hi!
caretf ind his r1l1tion.V-1 p will\ hit
tdon 1nd t drt!ll.IS.
Qi) 30 Mlnritt
Ill"" ail H1lac:hl
t :lO 8 IHI (J) Dorl• DIJ
0 C111dld Clm111
MY EXPERT
10 ROOFERS
NEED WORK!
let Ml JGff ,ou lilt ... 011ey.
We dt tht Ii 1 1 I retflnt
worli lft lilt •tea.
WENEOA ROOFING
NO. 1 ON
THE COAST
Your Homatown
Newspaper Is
The DAILY PILOT
Piel{ Your Own
"They Might Be Giants~
EXCLUSIVf:: ENGAGEMENT
..
" • ••a.C:.H •lVO a T 1.Ll>S • • •••· ~o••• .. ,... • ,.,,. 0 1100 .,.....
1•1 ·M Oe ' .. UNfl N GlON •••CH
STARTS
WEDNESDAY
MARCH 10
DAILV l'l\.OT 19
PORT THEATRE ' 2905 I . COAST HWY .. CORONA DIL MAR-67l..616D
10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
e llST PICTURE e llST ACTOR-Gtorgt C, S<.ott
e IEST DIRECTOR
e IEST STORY ""d 6 MORE NOMINATIONS
POPUL*.R MICESI
"A war movie
1torpeaple
'who hate
,war movies!"
-Rex Reed.
,HoJ.dayMa'gazine
CILfflflCllI['
ii l·-...,...
"IMPECCABLE PRODUCTION ... "mioiscentol
f1lmdom"s great entertainment films o! tile &olden days.•
-80:tOfflC£
"TOUCHING ..• UNFORGITTABLE ..: .... ,
LOVE STORY" ; ALL'\
-MllY MANf'C. FABUtOUS LAS \l(C.AS MAC.A.llNl ~w
'"""~ -... -1 -··-· ANNA CALDER·IAARSHALL TIMCTlfi DALTON ·-W!dheriQg
Heig-ts ... ·-~· --116000 TO LOOK AT ... beautifully muted tones
make ii eem earthier tha" the 1939 versiofl." -L • T11.1£~
wettd1v1 7:U I t :U
.• ... }~~. 1·1~. •-11.6 is.a 11.io-.11
ltt So111h (0411 Pl11z11
EXCLVSIV-E
ENGAGEMENT
Frtr P11rJr.i,,x
,,, ••• RESERVED SEAT ENGAGEMENT'\\
I ra I ~-~--.. .qz14.:zrtL·, Ora.: .. ~ .. ~·";; -~ -635--7601
' J(id s Like lo Ask Andy
£I!) Ch rist lht L1Yln1 WMd
£ll Ml A111or ,or 11
Ciil) Si111pl1mtnlll M1r11
€[!) Mltllttl1/ l'astor'1 Ots*:
m C..dfi111 dt An(UStin 'Osca1·' Winners
-1 ~ 7 Academy Award Nominations-Best Picture
Cl) MD¥11 '""'
f'.301J ~ (fl 'unsmo-• Sally fer1us
1emoves tWll bul\t1s !rum P1~e·1
shouldu but Ii lorctd to i:o to
Dodi• City to 5t tk med+c1I 111·
~JUI ind lt1rns that she h11 '"
estiped ouuaw in l'itr tiom• o~
10:00 fl a (J) Cttol lumatt Show
Guests: Mike Dou1!1s, B1rn1dett1
Ptt111. Tl1t' DAfl.-Y rl l.OT. in cnnprTntinn toit.h Ru~11n Pork'.~1
O l ie 5 !llws Kir."in\ Sinden. l>fnv1Pland \\'nx 1-1 '1.~rurn, n!frr.~ rPnder.~ n r.hn11ce _lri ptJr~i·
Bar"ey Morri$. r1pntf' 11~ tl(l ''nlfltnrle hnl/ntuio In .~elect pnpufnr 1111 1111 er.~ 1n
0 ltrtt1 wird "twt llir "Osrn ~ flerh 11" \\lf'rk'.~ vacatinn for twn in l\fr.xicn City
_ or l-ln11olu/11 n11rl a Jl/tlf'f o( hnnor (I t 1he SWr$' Holl. nf Famr m """ Gtofl• Putium, Hal Fi111· A1nnrrl5 Rn11q utt 1r1 Hnl/y1onn<I n11Hlit rile "atinnttL wi11nl!r. I
~EEA'l'TV
iiltDUNAW~
; ECJHHIE
~lillli~1 ....
IHI Ac:.lar -Ryan O 'Neal
I HI Aetrfl' -All Moc:Graw
[, ."'!# "? fl.l:lilrulll PCfiJ'IS oo.l~IS ~. ., ' · Ali MacGraw \rJm
lf'~~a~~~Neal \~-m\ ... i\\ .~ w_.
1J~--~p1rt II-el "P1~1;' Jf\lll, V()le not~ b y fillui g out. aJtd cbppuig out I his ballot:
•
ClJ ~@ €D Red Sk1tton Tony
R1nd1ll 1~tst-st1r1.
(l)Trtawr• "D11mond1 11 Ot1d _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ ___ _
M1"'1 ~-"
mworid l"rlll
IE L11tKlta
0 V!r1l11l1 Grah•m SMW Ch1rli1
Callas, K11tn V1 lentme. John DIV·
k!son and Joh" Tulll t 1utst. u @ mm u1•1 "'•k• • 0..11
Mo"ty Hill hos!\. CJ Millio n $ Mowlc (C) (2 111) 10:30 0 O.car Wtek Miwlt: (2 h1) "\.1 t
"Donovin'I rt"t" (comidy) '63-Strada" (dr11111) '56 -Anthon) 1 Xibn Wayne. Dorothy L1mo11f. (J. Ouinn, Giulitltl M1sin1. ~ brut1 I
N•'IY m~n Hvin1 on 1 South r1c1!1c stroni m~n uses a pnor, s1mplt I
hl1nd w1lh his Polyn1s11n wit1 and minded 11~ ~o s~rvt ~1m, le1Y1nJ f
11mi11 t1nd1 his idyllie 1x1stenc1 her no d1111ill in lh11 rludy ol 1
thrtl1tnM w~tn h11 g1own dl URh· i11ne11nt earnrv•I life.
hr by prtYIOUI m1rri a11 IHl'lfl
tram 8os1on 1n ~e11th o! him. m T1uth or Conwquenus
Barklr hos1l.
(!)It T1k11 a Thitl
...
fil C11 r W1ttll11 1 ColurY1n11\i
Ch1r1e~ Cll1mplin •~d Art Srldtft
b1um «1-host thl~ M111S foc1n1nr
on ~1ppen11111.1 In l A. 1
m Cintllll 30
ill LI Outftt -7:55 m Cutttlon dt 54irundo1
1:00 D ® ljJ m laup-111 Ru1h BUI·
ti. t i !Ji m qul!f!n l ave r111 BloSJOm.
m IHI }oh111 N"'
11:0011 ~· (J) €11 N""'
O ~Hll !!!I-
OQ)Nl'tfS
0 Movir. "Unie11 Stttitll" {rn)"S·
IUJ ) ·~ -WiLlilm Holde~. hn I
S!erlin1, 81riy ntt1e11td. I m Morrit: (C) "Tllt TllrM Muikt· I
lnrt" (1avtntur1) '43-Ul'll Tur11-
e1, Gene Ke lly, Junt Allpon. I
m 1.11 u .. ciod.
ml Warid l"rtsl
1, 1tunit1d on c1m1ra w1111 her tl:30 D l)t {l1 MtrY ,,ltfill
l(Jtnd1ry 1ereen lcriei Ramon Arm·
st1ong ( .... rte Johnion). 0 4li 00 ft' Jehnny C.t1011 r
0 <rf ClJ Q) N1'#1rwtd GUiit Bob 0 &) 0~ Clvtlt GutMi: M11iO I [~b1nks tiosts. Tho-nas. Carnl Cha11111n1. Erlwtrd
m lt Ttll tht Tilllll
fJl) Ctrrllll l¥tllb
£!) Mtn ti Vltlo~
,41bH. I
OJ Mtwit: ''\,lft¢~1intd" (dr11111) I
·~~[lror Hl"c~. B11b1r1 11111. I
1:00 II Mo<til: "Hl1h H11r {dra'"a) ·5g 1
-Jo~n Dtrd, Eltl11t St'war1, 1
a 0"'°" I
t·JO I) !ff I]) Hlf1'1 LICJ l llt'Y !1\11 2:)0 ti lite l.V S~ .. : "Wlfll lR tf I
' up 1~1'191Y1ftl t i 1 rn1k1-bellM 1 th1 Noltll C.Mntr(' tdr1m1) ·~1-!IObb~ In '" effort tt cem111c1 Kimi Rod C..muen, Jlvth H11aty, I
I
Tuesday
Bowdon. • 1
0 "TIM lire,et " Wfllh" fdll I
11111 ·•o -H~ry fnndt , Oorri1
1
1
m "Tht lnt111111r" fdfltnt) j I
"DAYTIME MOV~ES victor Md.a1!tn, Htllhtr A"lfl 11
~lark an ··x·· in the box which appears In
front of your selerlion. Vote for only one person
or film in each <'alegory. Please be sure to complete I
the 25-\vord statement at the end of the ballot and I
fill in your na.me. address and phone number so you
can be ('Onlarted if you win t he prize trip and ban·
quet invitation. All ballots must be returned (i n
person or b.v mail ) lo the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m.
on ~tonday. ~l arch 29.
Be•I Acl.11r
0 !!ELVYN TlOUGLAS for ··r Never Sang For
~ty father"
0 .IAMf.S EARL JONES for "'The Great \\111 ite
I-lope" n .J:\CK NICllOLSON for "five F.asy Pieces"
I' R'i '.A.N O'NE.A.L for "l11ve. Story"
C GEORGE C. SCOTT for "'Patton"
I ,I
,1
Be!lft Artre~~
0 JANE ALEXANDER lor "The Great White
I lope" 0 r.l.F.NDA JACKSON for "*omen In Love"
n .ALI ~1.i\r GRAW for "Love Story" n S1\RA ~111,F:S for "Ryan's Daughter"
0 CARRii; Sl'ODGRESS for "'The Diary of A
llouse\vife"
lle•I ~111111111 Plrture 11f 1970
"Alf\PORT'' (Unlver~al)
'"F"IVE F.ASY PtErEs" IColu mbi•l
"LOVE STOR'i'" <Paramount)
["
'l
G r
' "~t • 1\ •s•J·l" 120th Century Foxl
D "P,i\'f'1'0N" (20th Century Fox)
Wll\" I VOTEll FOR THIS Pl\TURE (in 25
\\'Ords or le!i!'): ...... , ........... , ....... .
....... ' ..... '.'.' .......... ' ...... ' ..
.. ' .......... . . ....... ' ... ' ....... ' '
' . . . . . ' . ' . . . . . . . . . ' .
Name .. ~·····Phone ·-~·····
Sl rl!P l Ad drr!'S .
'I I
end 11 1:10 011ly
STEVE
MCOUEl::N
AS ·
~f>ULLITT'
EXCLUSIVE!
FIRST RUN! !
ELLIOTT GOULD
DON tUTHERLANO
MARCIA ROOD
IN
TMelr LJJt est
"THE LITTLE
MURDERS''
RATED l
JUNIOR MATINEE
SAT AT 2 P.M.
TWO BIG THRILLERS
"THE OEADL Y BE£S"
AND t !OO 8 '1111 W1~1fts ttlllt" (l~'t'llllYrl)I Ptts!O" foshl.
'49-fl•nttolph Scott, [!\• flalntLI I :00 m '1\1 D11t t1111"" (mys!•ry) I ''T.HE VULTURES" '11y 1tf Hlfltr' lmy1ttl'Y) '42 -'Ji -tucillt 61+!, MArf Sttv•~L I ___ :.. - _____ - -- -______ _
IUc.11414 C11IM111, "'"l"J KtllJ. Cl1flot1 Wtbb. W1IU1"' ltndil.
l'1ty ............•......•.... Zip .. , •....
... Oto' o<•().o...._ COO<•..,,.., -!•l·l102 ...... -...... -.... -·---· Al10 Borbora Herdi.y In
•·rHE IAIY MAKER" !RI
DUSTIN HOffMAN" . ,.
"UTTll 816 MAN"
PRna\lision•TechnicokJI'' ~c>
Chief Don George • Foye Dunawoy
WINNER OF 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
INCL . BEST PICTURE ·ACTOR :1£>., ............. . · 1•1\'l"l't•N rllN ~M~f~s~·1r1:1J".JO. GEOllllF. I~ Sl~ITf o A•G••""C.••'I' i ,,.1..., il!!"l KAlll, MAI.DEN ________ ~A>j DIE<';O fWY Al lA P'l f1 1H~OH
830 6~90
·~!::-: BEST .~~.'.~, JAMES EARL JONES, Nlmlnff JANE ALEXANDER
!!ill "The Great · -
_, .. ,., ... r~~ll!·!!!'"!!I!'"".,' ••• .·-r.· -~eoior W~ite Hope"
~
-·-·--·-... ·-·· --....... ·-· ,_ • --c. .......
• • .. , ~f.H •lVO At , lll• ... ,, ... -· ......... , .. ,,..,,.,, l•?·•toe • HllHllHOfON •IAC H
dtaryota
mad housewife
a hank perry li!rn
.. ...-. IOC'1Ulll: ~ au -· '
IAVIO NlVlN I• .. • ACADEM Y .HOM1Nll THE~ "" 0.,., •• , KIUNPLAY ~· '""'G 'w""~ EU & I >" "" Ott I! ~ ' ( " •)I>
,.,.0 rci "li•1• '"'"" """'' "i Mail ballot to : "Oscar", c /o DAILY PILOT,, All Seats 75c
· --<>••• ""'"~"· '""' '""'"· uo o,. "!,,'.:•::,~ •• ~.·~~;"~;·~~;,:'PO Box 1560, Costa Mesa, CA. 92626 \, .. _______ .,. ---------·-----------·--------iu1~111 Moo11, -"" ·• -
\ -"----
•
.. I :.
•
I
J
-
SC DAJLY l'!l.OT JI
' . . .
I,
Complete Closing Prices -American Stock Exchange List
I '
I
I {
I I
\
'
·i '
I
I
.!J OAILY PILOT Monda,, March 8, 19n
Russians
Paying
For Cuba
By PHil. NEWSOM
UPI Foreign New• Analyst
The Russians are paying
plenty for their L at I n
American foothold· in Cuba.
In Mo5COW, at the end of
February, the Soviets and the
Cubans aigned their aMual
trade agreement In .
ceremonies at which Mikhail
Klllmln, a first d e p u t y
minLster of Soviet f<ftign
trade, said that 1971 would
aee an increase of $110 million
in the value of Russian good.s
1ent to Cuba.
Soviet 11id has beea keeping
the CUban economy afloat for
the last 10 years, an.d the
Cubans now are estimated to
owe the Russians more than
$3 billion exclusive of military
aid.
With the Cuban economy
go\ng deeper into ~e hole
each year. the Russians can
have but little hope of ever
being repaid.
And the logical question Is
how Jong will the Russians
continue a policy which seems
to be one of ever-diminishing
returns. In a nuclear war between
the United States a11d the
Soviet Union, CUba's value to
the Russians w o u 1 d be
dubious.
But, sin~ Latin Amerlca
11 regarded by many as the
next great area of cold war
~flict between the United
State! and the Soviet Union,
Its peacetime value or ils
value bi case of conventiona1
warfare ls enormous.
It gives the Russians a
friendly port where no other
exists.
Tt· can provide the. Soviet
Navy with food and faciHUes
for shore leave and repairs.
It could interfere with ship-
ping through the Panama
Canal and threaten the canal
ttself. It also could pose a
threat to shipping movinc::: out
or the mouth of the Missis-
sippi River.
Further. It has the prestige
value of providing th e
Russians a haven in waters
heretofore exclusively .,
American.
As for the Cuban people
themselves, even Fidel Castro
admit.! the Immediate future
Is not bright.
Rationing which began In
1962 has become even tighter.
Cigars and clgarets were put
on the rationing llst' last year
for the first time.
For Cuba's ills, Castro has
the diagnosis but not the cure.
In speeches he has blamed
the country's plight first or
all on high absenteeism and
tow labor productivity.
In a speech last July, he
declared:
" .. neither this nation's
ecoPJomy, nor that of any other
nation can tolerate the cor·
rosive. demoralizini;t and
disruptive actions of 400.000
shirkers."
Such a figure w o u l d
represent 20 percent of Cuba's
labor fora!.
At another lime. he said :
.. . . . productivity has been
practically forgotten, and the
lack of It is a bottomless
plt thit can Wallow all of
the country's human
resources."
At one point he took to
latik worker! who took warn·
lngs on the health hazards
of smoking as a reason to
nejtlect the tobacco crop.
Sugar remains Cuba's chief
money earner. Last year
Cu.tro oressed for a croo of
t o million tons but fell a '
mlllioPI and a half tons short
despite drawing off workers
from Industry and all other
forms of Cuban enterorlle.
Thts year he has told Cuban
worken the ttop must rome
ta .even mflllon loo!. It ac·
tually 11 erpected to come
to no more than five or six.
Ch eck th e Most
Popu lar New
Colu·mn ·Alive ...
'Checking Up '
--
Price• Effective
3/7 thru 3/9/71
Sears
Tire and Auto Center
GRAND PRIX
MARCH 28, 1971 at . <::X:>
Ontario Motor Speedway
SPEC IAL SEARS DISC OUNTS
•7
*14 •12 . •10
'9 •u
SEARS FAMILY DISCOUNT PLAN
Buy Anl Ticket ac Regular Price •.. Get Addi1iooal Tickets
(of simi u value) for ONLY $3 for eK.h Child 16 yean or
Under.
Pick Up YOUt" Discount Coupon• At Any Sears Auro Center And Get
lickeu ac the Ticketron Oudtt At Cusromcr Convenience Counter.
SIZE Tr1de·ln
l'rif'r
!75-13 s:16
1115-14 $41
195-14 $44
205-14 $4?
215-14 S54
195-t5 $47
205-15 $53
215-15 $58
225-15
Sl'c.trs IUINA rAllC T.\ 1-4•00, 121.41)0 ll MONl'I GI ).).II
(-A..00.\ ,Alk a4Qw0661 , GllMDALl CH 5·100•, 0 4-461~
COM"ON"'Mf .. 2Jll, NI 2·17•r MOU.TWOOD HO 9•J941
S.£.AAS,IO~AHDCO. COVINA •U.o611 INtUWOOD Olt t •212t
Shop Nflld• .... thru Sat. t.ao A.M. I• 9130 P.M., lvnday 12 """'to s P.M.
'
WIDE GUARD
2 Fiberglass Belts Plus 2 Nylon Plies
36-Month Guarantee
Regular Trade-in
Price '28.95 \
'""'"'"' s.1. SIZE T..ri.1;, ll"rodt·I• F T l'ri«I Pn«i • E. •
TUBELESS BLACKWALL
6.50x l3/C78-13 28.95 21.71 2.00
7.75xl4/F78-14 33.95 25.46 2.54
8.25xl4/G78-14 36.95 27.71 2.69
8.25xl5/G78-15 37.95 28.46 2.80
A.1k A.boui Seari
Conve nient
Credit Pla.r'3
6.50xl3/C78-l3
Tubeleu Blackwall
Plus !2 F.E.T.
And Old Tire
!I..,.,... :s.1. '
SIZE ·~P.::.11' ~~· P.t.T.
TUBELESS WHITEWALL
7.35xl4/E78-14 35.95 26.96 2.37
7.75xl4/F78-14 37.95 28.46 2.54
8.25xl4/G78-14 40.95 30.71 2.69
8.55x14/H78-14 43.95 32.96 2.95
8.85x 14/J78-1 4' 46.95 35.21 3.05
8.25x l5/G78-15 41.95 31.46 ~.80
8.55xl5/Hi8-15 44.95 33.71 J.Ol
SAVE 2 5% On Any Siz e Listed
Superwide "70"
36-Month Guarantee
46
,
Regul ar S:J7.9j
Trade-Jn
Price
:.! Polyeater Plie1
Plot:? Fiberil1~1 Belis
7.35xl4/E70.14
Tubelen
Whitewall
Plu12.5 1 F.E.T.
And Old Tire
•Wide>\ tire we se ll ••. with bold, low profile and
Fiber Gla" Hells
•For superior traction and long mi leage
ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE
G .. ~r•nlt•d A31inot' /.!I 1ire r.;1\1.ffa from normal
<11..J buud• or dtfect1 in mHtrllll or WO<km1111h ip r.,,. Hnw I.on~: for 1hc lift ol 1ht ori1inlll 1tt1J
'\\'hit Stein Will Uo' In ach1np ror 1M i.rt. reploct
i1, ch.,111n11 only fCK 1he proponion o( cu.ntnt oellins
rnct plu• F..dtt1I Euite Tu 1h11represents1rnd 111t
Repair 11111 p11nc111rr111 no chlUP'
Ga1r1nter.d Ai11ino1' Treld 9/Clt-OUT
~·or Ho" l.ons: Tu number of mon1h• 'llt"Clf•cJ
'9;1h11 ~In Will O,,, In c1ch1nsc for 1hc ""'·replace
if. chwging 1ht currenr otllong pri<e plus Feder~!
ExciotTu lc111hc fl)l!(lorting atfo .. 1ncc:
!\lontho G111r1nlted Allnw•nre
181024 JO"ii
27 1n }9 10'l>
~o :)%
Sears Steel Belted Radials
2 Steel Belts ,Plus Rayon Cord Plies
$
•
•Tread reinforced with 2
steel belts, virtuall y eli ..
minating au types or
road haza r"ds · \
175-13 Tubeless Whitewall
Pluo 1.94 F.E.T. And Old Tire
•Rayon cord plies pro•
vide smootl1 secure ride
•Tread lifetime plus 40,·
000 mi le tread wear-out
guarantee
SEARS ALLSTATE RADIAL PASSENGER TIR E GUARANTEE
LONG llACN Ml 1·0121
OLYM"C I. SOTO AN l •S211
OIANOI 6lf ·2100
r.111ADINA 61l•l211, ~Sl·4111
,OMON.\ NA. t41•1
l'tCO WI t-4162
SANTA ANA kl 1°))71 ..
l.lll'ftA n l,_INOI M4•IOl 1
SANTA MONICA ti. •·•71 ,
IOllTM C.OAfT tl4.lA M0-.1)))
•
1'0Juri1/liG: n;, kn p__,. T1rit Gt>........, ..;y
.. .........i ... , i.e.. retool ... ......
-, .... lJ.!1',..,.,....... ..... .;.. "-"" .-..ri<o-,, dot <!Ifft ... u..,. -. 1•IH11111 opptonlllo. ,_.nl F..1•
Ta '""' I• df«t •""'"" ....... ad--' .. -.i. n.......r-br --·ci-··-
ntOUSAND OAICI 4•1-4SU
TOIU"ct J42·151l
Ul't.AMI> ••J·1•27
VAUIY PO •·14•1. •14·2220
YtlMONT K •·lfll
•
•
-•. ••
DAILY PILOT lltff l"Mte
Luguna Beu11tified
Palm trees have been planted along the steepest
hill in Laguna Beach, the Third Street hill. The
planting was part of the Laguna Beach Beautifica·
tion Committee's work to. upgrade esthetics in the
art colony. Trees were planted in time for Arbor
Day Sunday. Le ft to right are Jeff Bil!lngs, city em·
ploye; Don Rose, committee memberi and Mrs. Pat
Peacock, committee chairman.
Teenage Sniper
Kills Self After
Shooting Autos
'.\SENWATER, Wash. (UP!) - A
16-year-old boy who had "never been
in any trouble" was found lying face
down in the snow, killed by one of
two rllles he had used Sunday to riddle
passing automobiles.
"I can't see any reason for it," said
\Yilliam H. Egnew Sr., the father of
the sniper and an inspector (or the
Seattle Fire Department ··He was too
good humored ... too stable."
William Herbert Egnew Jr. perched
In a "foxhole-type'' crevice atop a 100-
foot c!Uf and began spraying .22 caliber
rifle bullets at passing automobUes on
U.S. 410. At least 18l Vehicles were hit,
includilfB ~n'ambQ!an& which ha'd ~me
to take away one of the four persons
wounded.
The unsuspecting targets ol the bar-
rage said after they never heard a
v.•ord from lhe youlh, who only returned
their shouted pleas to slop shooting with
more bullets.
"We were riding along just talking
about things, teenager s, drugs , things
like that," said Mrs. ~1ary C. Pluewnarz,
31 , of Buckley, one of the victims.
•·Then I heard something hit the win-
dow. . .and I saw a lilUe hole in
the glass. I felt something on my arm ,
like a blow. I reme mber thinking that
a rock hit the window. I put my hand
on my sleeve and thereo.was blood."
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Many Poor Americans
Getting Jolt From IRS
WASlUNGTON (UPI ) -Millions of
Americans, many or them very poor,
v.•ill discover by April 15 that they owe
the government money because not
enough taxes we re withheld from thelr
paychecks.
The In ternal Revenue Service (IRS)
said that althoug h a majority of all
taxpayers will qualify for a refu nd this
year as every year, some pers~ who
normally expect to get money back will
have to send a check along with their
returns this year.
The problem is a fallout from the
Tax Reform Act of 1969.
~ often seems the , case in income ~ t.ax matters, t.l)e·reeion1 for the problem
are complex. But Tuey all stem from
the fact that withholding rates and actual
tax rates start from different assump-
tions.
There are about 25 brackets -ra nging
from 14 to 70 percent of taxable income
-on the gove rnment's income tax
rate schedule. This determines the
amount each taxpayer owes.
Hut there are only six brackets -
ranging from 16 to 31 percent -on
the withholding schedule w h I c h
determines how much 1noney actually
will be deducted (rom paychecks.
In add ition, !here is a difference in
the tncon1e base for withholding a n d
actual taxes. The final tax is applied
against "taxable income" -earnings
minus deductions and the $625 personal
exemption for each member of the faml·
Jy. Withholding rates are applied against
earnings minus exemptions although the
rate structure is adjusted to account
for the 10 percent standard deduction.
Ejected Youths
Spark SA Riot
' A group of IS to lll youths, thrown
out of a theater, created a minor riot _
in Santa Ana's .downtown &edion Sunday
night. .
' One 17-year-old boy was arrested for'
breaking a drugstore window a t
Broadway and W. 4th Street and taking
me rchandise. Some display Items were
also stolen from a 'jewelry store at
113 W. 4th St., police reported.
Several store windows were smashed
but officers had no estimate o( the
doll ar damage today.
The youths had been tossed out or
the Santa Ana Theater, Broadway and
W. 4th Street by !ecurity guards for
disrupting a perform anct.
Police said they we ·e ej11:M<>rl ".1-~ ..
other palro111 complained that they could
not hear the sound track.
fBPBIBP
Jahn '
Big-T;urnout
c )
For Route
.
Voting Seen
By L "PEIEK 10U1G
Of .... Clellt' "" .....
Newport Beach CltJ C1ilt Laura
Lagtos today forecast 11th. fXb'tmely
heavy turnout" In Tuelda)''1 Pactno
Cout Frftway electl«I.
C!tlrc Ibo unusually lart• number ol
abse!I~ ballots, ~ numbertne
more than 200, Mrs. i:.aiios 11 l d the
turnout cou ld be "as high u 40 percent.~
or nearly 9,500 of Newport'• IS,llO ellil·
ble voten.
The city's 25 polling pW:eo wm ope•
at 7 a.m. and cloae at 7 p.m.
Mrs. Laglos asked votert to t a·k e
spechll note of the clO!lng time, pointing
out that It Is one hour ~ than
county·ad111inlstrated electlotio.
Two propositions are on· the Wot. ·
The first Is an initiative that U adl>pted,
-1d "ask" the City Council to rac!nd
a portJon of an agreement •Ith the
Stat. Divblon of 1118hw1ys deall111 with
city street closing• along the route of
the planned freeway eqt of Upper
Newport Boy through eo,... del Mir.
The second is a Olutet llnlndlnent
that, pending ratification by tbe state
legislature, would, lf adopted, require
city councils to conduct referendums
at any point in the future that they
want to adopt similar agreementa on
the coastal, or any other, freewa y.
The election was forced by the Citizens
Coordinating Committee of the Freeway
Fighte1'8, which late la.st year met
Charter referendum requirements by fil·
ing petitions that were signed by more
than 15 percent of the registered voters.
CCC officials claimed that nearly 10,000
persons signed the petitions although
Mrs. Lagios verified only the minhnum
number of names.
The two-month election campalp. has
he ated in recent days, to the point .where a fonner city official who tried to legally
atop the electton. has aaid. he may sue
Vice Mayor Howard Rogers for making
allegedly slandero111 remarks.
Fonner vice mayor Hans J. Lorenz,
who with two former mayors bad unsuc-
cessf ully appealed to both Superior Court
and California Supreme Court to atop
the vote, said Thursday Rogers' attack
on him for that action "may juatify"
a slander 1utt.
Rogers bad referred to Lorenz and
former mayors Charles E. H a rt and
James B. Stoddard as "snakes emerging
from an agricultural preserve" in a
talk at an election rally last Monday
night.
In the campaign for a<-"oo" vote,
the Fretway Fighters ha~ maintained
that a 'muslve negative count would
stop the state's plans to build the coastal
freeway throu~ the city, or at least
along the adopted route parallel to the
Pacific Coast Highway In West Newport
and soulh of Fashion Island and along
Fifth Avenue through Corona de! Mar.
The anti-freeway campaign has not
differentiated between the two segmenll
of the route, although the initiative to
rescind the agreement only deab: with
the Corona del Mar segment.
Support for a "no" vote on both issues
hu come formally from a five-member
majority ol the City Council, which s)gn·
ed the "yes" ballot arguments, and a
citizens commtttee beaded by former
mayors Mrs. Doreen Marshall and Stod-
dard.
DAILY PILOT
• ·Petitioning Begins
Julie Ireland of Village Laguna watch,. II Jr,em111 X. Spreyer slgnJ
petition for initiative to limit buildil!g height tJi La1una Beach to 36
feet. U 10 percent of city's registered voler1 1!111 the height-limli
' issue would go to voters in 1972 general electlon. U 15 percent algn,
a special election would be called.
Newport Freeway Election
Shroi1ded by Legal H8:Ze
A legal cloud will hang over the rttults
of Tu esday 's freeway elecUon in Newport
Beach no matter which way the votes
go.
To help clarify the I.slues on the ballot,
however, the following will explain what
will happen barring 111y possible court
action.
The first question, the lniUatlve to
Ketch Cracks Up
On Island . Rocks;
4 Aboard Saved
Four perlOfl! wm reacued bJ'·• United
States Coast Guan! h<llcopter early today
after a t7-loot ketch slammed Into a
rock off the northeast end of San
Clemente Island and !ank.
The ketch wu Identified u the Blue
Sea, owned and 1klppered by Barry
HeWtz of San Rafael. 1be four crewmen
were ldentllled as Harold Cogswell,
Charles Libra, and Phillip RandleJ all
of Berkeley.
Coast Guard officiaJs said Heifilz
radiod a distress call at 1:38 a.m. but
fu rther communlcaUona were JO!t.
. All lour persons · took to a life raft
and were rowing a.shore when the
helicopter arrived on the scene and blew
them ashore with Its prop wa1h.
The four survivors were then picked
up and taken to San Diego. All were
reported In .good condition.
rescind the agreement on · street doling
along the route through Corona del Mar,
la not binding on the City Council.
II a majority votes ••yes" on the
IS!Ue, th< City Council, probably Mardi
22, will meet to decide It It should,
In fact, follow the dictates of the elec-
torate and cancel the contract.
Although the Newport council, ltaelf,
has supported. a "no" vote, if a lignifl-
cant majority votes to rescind the qree-
ment, lt ls expected to follow the.Jr
wishe:s.
The second question, the City Charter
amendment requiring referendums uy
Ume in the future the council wants
to si gn a similar street-closing agree--
ment, must be aent to the CalUornla
Legislature for raWlcaUon lf a majority
votes "yea."
There ls , however, no guarantee the
legillature will raUfy the amendment
because of the aigniflcance and con-
troversy surrounding the propos!Uon.
The legal and polltlcal lmpllcatkma
of both issues are far-reaching, and
if the measures are carried u an-
ticipated, City Attorney Tully Seymour
has forecast the atate, 11 well 11 Jl'ivate
Interests, may challenge their enactment
In the courts.
On the other hand, should the councn
not act on the rescission abould it pass
narrowly, the Freeway Fighters could
seek a court directive to force the action.
And if both measures fail, the Freeway
Fighters can also be expected to persist,
perhapt along legal avtnuel, to gain
their major objective - a new Pacific
Coast Freeway route through West
Newport.
F resh ••. skinless .•• frorn the people who know about po~k ••• Farmer J ohn! Eight ounce pack1gea of goodness ,,. IO delightful •
breakfast treat, with a ll your favo rite go-togethers! Shop El Rancho this week ••• and 1tart the day with a hearty breakfast!
-
Ham loaf .. ·~YE.N. ~E~~~ •. 89~
Lean tasty ham, fresh ground ••• blended "'ith whole fresh eggs!
Meat Loaf. ~oy~~ ~~A~! .. 7·9~
Just shape and bake ... the fresh whole eggs hold it together!
Fruit Salad .. .. . .. . . . ............................ 79'
Fresh fru it in a jar ••• at our del icatessen! Quart
Kava .Instant Coffee ........... :. ~ ..... :~:::: .... '1.59 -·
Save 20c on tile big eight ounce jar .•• and enjoy flavor.
-.
Pancake Mix ...... 39< Grapefruit .......... ; 29c
Pill•bury makes it ••• "Extra Light" , , , 2 pound package I
Price1 in effect ltfon., Ttte1., Wed.
Ma.r. 8, 9, 10. N o Sale1 to dtaUr1.
Bordo ••• open the No. 303 can nd aerve ripe sweet aectiona!
Syrup ......... ~ ........ 69c
Vennont Maid .•• maple·r goodne'3 In the 24 oz. bottle! .
Pineapple Juice ...................... : ..................... 29'
Dole'• ••. big 46 oz. can ••• serve it chilled fo r brealctast della'htl
Zee Napkins .~ ... ~ .................... , ..................... 10•
In "Sunfreah" eolol'll to brighten the table I ••• 60 ct. pkg.
ARCADIA: . PASADENA: SOUTH PASADENA: HUNTINGTON BE AC H: NEWPORT BEACH: 1771 Nrwpurl Blv<i ·""
Sunset and Huntington Dr.(EI Ranc ho Cente1) 3ZO ~'Jest Colorado Blvd Frt!mon t an d Munt1 n~!on D1 Vli11ner and r,1;ro11qu111 (Bo.11111'1.ll ~ CPn1 ) .''i'11J I o\lh!11!f Or (I t\lb!oH \tl lagr. Crn lrr)
;>""''·' ·~--· <• • -' • J " , •
•
I
I
'
•
'
• •
f ""11.Y PILOT Monday, Marth 8, 1971
. . Israel Before~ After War
u.~<R.· " ..
• • "L
JORDAN
'.
'
AUDI ARABIA " '
'JOftDA!f It.
' ' .
USAlEM
JORDAN
Ceasefre agreements ran out along the Suez Canal
Sunday but observers are hopeful today that bostili·
ties won't break out in full force Truce is fragile
and pressure is being applied on both Egypt and
Israel to reach agreement. President Nixon has
pointedly called for an almost total withdrawal by
lreal from lands it captured in the 1967 war.
Rolls Makes Big Layoff;
r Lockheed Talks Continue
LONDON CAP) -The Rolls·Royce
C.o. announced today a big layoff (If
workers as the U.S. and British
governments tried to work out the future
of the firm's RB211 jet engine.
Rupert Nicholson, the accountant na m·
ed to unravel the Rolls-Royce's financial
affairs, said 4,300 employes -many
of them white collar workers -would
lose their jobs in the next three Weeks.
"The reduction is independent of the
RB211 situation and does not take into
account the ~Ible cancellation or the
RB211 program," Nicholson said in a
statement.
It the engine -built for the Lockheed
Corp's TriStar airliner -is scrapped,
Rolls' layoffs will be much higher.
The layoffs were ordered at Rolls·
Royce plants at Derby and Barnoldswick
in England and at Glasgow in Scotland.
The 'figure represents about 1\1 percent
of the company's labor force.
Nicholson announced the layoffs shortly
before Britain's aviation minister.
Frederlck Corfield, was to make his
report Cln prospects of saving the RB211
whose development costs caused the
financial crash which put Rolls into the
hands of a reeeiver.
The minister's report deals with his
negotiations in London last week with
I..Dckheed Chairman Daniel Haughton.
Laborite legislators are demanding an
explanation, too, from Trade and
Industry Minister John Davies about the
effects of the Rolls layoffs.
Malcolm Muir, Rolls' aeroengine sales
manager in the United States, flew into
London today from Lockheed's California
plant and said the American firm was
"moving away from us" over the RB211.
Muir urged the govenµnent to contact
Lockheed urgenUy and "construct an
offer which will meet the requirements
of the airlines which have ordered the
TriStar.
Muir warned O:Lat the airlines -who
have been asked to pay more for the
Tri Star lo abSorb some of the RB21 I's
runaway development costs -would
not wait for protracted negotiations
between Lockheed and tbe British
government on a final price.
Big Day Near
Coxes w Attend Nixo1is' Party
WASHINGTON (UPI) -President and J\1rs. Nixon have invited the
famlly and friends o( Edward Finch Cox to an "Irish evening at the \Vhile
house" March 16 at which they are expected lo announce the engagement of
Uieir daughter Trkla1o the Harvard law student.-
Mrs. Nixon's 59th birthday falls on that date and there will be a joint
celebration. Guest of honor will be Prime Minister and Mrs. John Lynch of
Ireland.
Invitations have been received by Col. and Mrs. Howard Ellis Cox and
by many of their 23-year-old son's friends. The wedding is expected to be held
1n the White House about June 12.
J\1is.s Nixon, 25, spent the weekend in New York with her rumored fiance.
A friend close to the family described the tall, handsome Cox as "very much
In love." Miss Nixon and "Fast Eddy," as he is kn own by friends for the
speedy pace he keeps, met on a blind date six years ago.
Cox, a Princeton graduate who also attended Yale, has one more year
at Harvard for his law degree. After marriage, friends say !}le couple will
take an apartment in or near New York City.
Britisli Subjects
Urged to Leave
East Pakistan
LONDON (AP} -The British govern·
ment has advised the 1,000 Brit.O'tfs in
East Pakistan to leave the country if
their presence is not essential because
of the threat of civil war.
The Foreign Office said it had no
reports of any Britons being injured
in the turbulence that has gripped Dacca,
the capital of East Pakistan, for the
past week. But the advice to lpave
was given by Deputy High Commissioner
Frank Sargeant as a precaution.
East Pakistan 's political leader, Sheik
f\.1ujlbur Rahman. aod bis Awami League
are locked in a struggle with the nation 's
military president, Gen. Agha Moham-
med Yahya Khan, and the West
Pakistanb who dominate lhe central
governi;nent and the Army.
After a week of protest strikes and
violence in which at least 173 East
Pakistanis were killed, Sheik Mujib at
a mass meeting in Dacca Sunday ordered
a civil disobedience campaign lo force
Yahya Khan to lift martial law and
return the army to its barracks.
Jet-age -Prince
Leaves Palace
LONOON (UPI ) -Prince Charles
traded his Buckingham Palace bachelor
pad for a Royal Air Force-approved
student residence today and bade
farewell to civilian life for up to rive
years.
The 22-year-old heir to the British
throne was beginning a five-month
coorse in-advanced-flying-training at
the RAF's college at Cranwe.11, 150 miles
north of London.
In September, he goes into the Royal
Navy for up to five years.
Al Crariwell, the prince will have th!.
rank or flight lieutenant and will have
to salute senior officers. At his own
request he will receive no pay. His
mess bills will be sent to Buckingham
Palace.
Charles will live in a college-approvtd
residence with three other students. Also
sharing the apartment will be the
prince's detective bodyguard.
Spring Warmup Expected
East, North Fight Off Snowy Lashing; West Sunny
Calltornla
IJ' UNITllD .... SS tNTl•NATIONAl.
SCIU"*1'1' Calltoml1 ~., -•llT
h lr alld tUMY lod•Y wl"' ao:im• local
•u1lr wll'IOJ 1" tM mount1ln1. $"1on-
•I n!tl'll ..,.., morrol111 fol w.11 p .. wa·
,..,, ., [0911•1 .,"'·
L• Antllft wn mllllll'f IUMW with
-l'lloh cl<Mf• ln!er1-1t'd with
lot' •1111 loW clallelf, d11rl1111 llle nltM
111d rnoml111 hollr1. ti. lern...er1h1r1
w11 cool•r wtlll • 70 Pftdll;ll'd for flit
Clwk Cllnlllf' _.m wl"' 7S Sllt>dtv
•1111 t1 fll.PfCttll tllftder. Tiii low I~
"1911! so: .
T111 Air Poll11tlo!t COfltrol 0 !1trltt , ... "°'""" 111111 wnott r" Thi Lot. A111e111
Balft wltl't ll'tt m••lmllm ot-l1w111
11 ,70 .. rlt -lftllllon. Vl1lbll!l"I'
r•l!flld from ~ tt '°""' mlltL
Tiii 11...,...Wy for1Ktll Wll !of "'°''
t•lr -1'Mr' with tht tiltftl I" "'-
hltll '°' 1nd tow 70I 111 !I'll Cott!l1
• ..., lnttrlof' •rtlL $Otnl 11:19 Ind loW
dolld5 ..... fa Cllftfllllll •lollt .....
coe1!1. Wllld• _,.. lrtlfll It hi 10 mllr t ..,
,.,,,.,, ., ""' bwdln •nd .... hi.I\•
_. trom • 11 '5 -.e the Clou<il
<lu rid. fllt w111r w11 D. ~,,,,!,,. ~· ll]Olll'r ll.I""" Wlltt -Piii'! 'ttivd. 1M wlftOt ,..,,, lf
la 1S rftlln •11 hour, Hion1 ,..,, lrt , ... so..
OtM<'tlr. Wll'I IUMlr .,..,,.. -h i ... ciouo. '"'° w1rlCI tuill. u_.-w11t•r
hlfhrl!I "" tot Ind !OW'lr Vl lllT l!iwnl
111 "" "'· H'9111 $1111dtr •nd IH'l'dlcled hlt l'll ft-
c1w IMhldl: L-IMdl , .. 10. s.1111
Mollk1 ~ 8ur!Mllllt 1••IO, Ml, Wit.
llO!! "°"$, l'•ll!lllfl• •H1, •r...1nlcll
....,,, '''"' 511!"ll'ltl I0-'9. l #ertlltld 1'-12, i.a11 Olft& •141, kMI larM1• *"'" ANl!t111'14aril• AM 1...,._
Coutal
Mat!IY w1111'1' hlclt'f. Uthl var)41blt
Wllloll "ltM ,..., "'°"'lllt houri blc:~
1,.,. .... ,.,1., 10 11 20 t;not1 In ,.,.,.
,,_, tllftr •l'ld 1 .... oc11~. Hltll toc111
jO II fS.
Co•lllll ltml't•tl11rn r111H I~ ~ f0 .'5: JljJ111d "!tmpeflN'l'll r'lr'lltt -fl'Onr
_ l.'J i. J: Wa"Mr ltmwr1turr St. •
S11n, ltltPf'''· Tide•
MONOAY
$«O'ld hltl\ . 1:'' '·"'· •.o
$9(ond low 7;.51 •·""· .... TUISOAY
l"lnl 1'11111 , 1;00 .,,,,,, SJ
Jlllnl low . 7:00 1,m, 1.•
5IQftd llltf\ . l :• •·""· 4.1
S900lld ""' ' t ;lf pJTI • .O.J
511n •h•1 111,..,,$,l'I S:SJp.m.
~ A'-J:OJ fl.IT\, Wl'I u• '.tn.
V.S • .Summary
LOS ANGELES fU .. 1)-Tlot N1tlool-
tl .... , .... """""'"':
••'" d•ll'\PtMtl tM 1'1cllk "°''"' -ll tod•'f '"" 1111 Ultltlf II« DI llOrtll-
11111<"" 111111, Ir°"' Mlcrl!t111 10 N""
Et191alid 1-s.cl 1(1 Ille !Intl >r'O"t'l'
!all al • A9':"1t\~ 1111.., .. ~rnu..
fr1v11 rtmtllll'll d!!llw11 I" "'' GrMI L.111.U fftl&ll •IMI l!'!Clllftltln
I T"J lfllt 10 htlYY lflOW t~•r •!Id
wlftCl.Crfvl!I ll!OW ll11rrlr1.
W~lll ''°'' tllCI l\trd ffMlll •..C?IH °'"" Int. fM JOU!ll IMllldlnt 110t"'-r11
l'lorld1, • wuml"' "-btffn & ....
ftlr c'"tr11 tit!"' from '"' Hllt•ll
tlotM el lllol lllDCl!lt1 le M l111"1"',
,,,. tprlllf Wll'f!\U" Wll lltllfdld
'11 flow M 1lw1rd 1"11 lur!lllPI" IOI/,..,
boo1tl11t tM lrltld 1tr Htttnl t lottr ..... IOl\I, "°'"' ..
•
Temperatures
l ...,Pe<'llutfl • ..., preclpll10"" fer
"'• 2•·1!our pet"lod rllCll"' ~I I 1.m .
Alllt11Y
A!bu<1ue«1u•
,l.l\1n11
AllC-1111
lll1m.l'(:k
lli»!on
8rown1VIC!e
llull8IO
Cf\lc1110
(JMl11Nl l
Clw"9""
011111
Denver
D•lroit Ftlrbl'nlct
Honolvl11
l""l•"""'ll ,_,
K1M1S Cll"I
lt• V"11
Llulsvllll
Mem.tll1 ......
Mltw111tM
Ml ...... p&UI
N-Ot'tfffll N-:Vlr1t Olo:ll,_,. (i'ty
°"""" P/\lllOl!pllla
P'°Oeftl•
Porfl1pd, Ott.
A:1pld t1tr ·-SK•tmer>IO
St. t.....I•
S•tt Ltkt Cltv
!>In Oll'fO
Sin Ft111C:l-
Se11111 , ... _
W••"'"''ot1 Wl~11!i•1t
Hltll'"t• Pre<.
l6 ,.. ..2J
51 21
~ ~
·l ~ .CIS " . 31 J) ,,5
19 IJ
11 17 .IM
XI '' ,OJ JS 21 ,01
d t t ,1,
" " u • " " ... ·11 -30
~ " XI 11 .01
n " .. " if JI .. ,. .. " .. " :rt 1.S ~I ,. . .. " ., » .1J
" n " " ,. " ,1J ~ ~ " " JI 17 .. " " " " " . " " ~ M ., ,, ,.. ... " ,. .., " " " ..
Suez Canal Bristles
But Cease-fire Ends With No Fighting
By Unlltd Prett IDteru.Uonal
The Egyptian interior mlnlstry ordered
1 partial blackout In Cairo today follow·
Ing expiration of the Middle East cease-
fire at midnight Egyptian President
Anwar Sadat warned Sunday of the
possibilty of Israeli reprisal raids against
Egypt.
Both Arab and Israeli troops were
on full alert the length of ·the 103--mile
Suez Canal, but hours after the truce
expired there were no reports that
hoslilltie's bad been resumed. Sadat
refused to extend the cease.fire but
diplomats believed a truce would to!}>
Unue on an hour-to-hour basis.
Official sources said the partiaJ
blackout was ordered by Interior
Minister Sharawl Gomaa , underlining the
seriousness with which the government
views the situation. He also issued
"'urgent orders on civil d e f e n s e
measures" after a meeting with his
top aides.
A similar blackout order has been
nominaJly tn effect since the 1967 Arab-
Jsraeli war but many people paid little
attention to Jt.
Both Israeli Foreign Minister Abba
Eban and Egyptian Foreign Minister
Mahmoud Riad were reported beginning
new initiatives to ease tbe Mideast situa-
tion.
The Israeli afternoon newspapers
Maariv and Yedioth Aharonoth said
Eban would Jeavt: for the United St.ates
within eight days for talks in New York
with U.N. mediator Gunnar V, Jarring
and in Washington witb President Nixon.
Both forecast increased U.S. pressure on
Israel to ease Its hardline stand.
Cairo Teports sald Riad would call
in the Big Four envoys in Cairo to
discuss development! in the Mideast
situation and urge them to have their
countries shoulder responsibilities during
this critical stage.
Military analysts of the tw1 IsraeU
newspapers said the real danger on the
canal now Is how local Egyptian com~
manders react to the new situation.
They said one mistake by a hot-headed
local commander could well start a
fourth Middle East war.
Israeli Deputy Premier Yigal Allon
told Israeli scboolcblldren to d a y
everything possible will be dooe to bring
peace to the Middle East and save
them being caught in the draft.
He spoke to a gathering of high school
pupils in the Red Sea port of Eilat.
"We will try to make our political
struggle yield a durable peace treaty
which will ;si1ure the safety and honor
of all nations in the region," Allon said.
"We shall do everything possible for
you so that when you reach draft age
you shall have no more wars."
The only reported action was a clash
between Palestine guerrillas in Syria
and Israeli troops. An braeli military
•
spokesman said-"a~" o! Jong. __no~ .the cease:.Dre.-announced be
range rockets fired by the guerrillas had made a secret trip to .t.1oscow March
from Syria slammed into a kibbutz oo 1 to confer with Communist Party leader
the Israeli-occupied Gillan Heights at Leonid J. Brezhnev, Premier Alexei N,
10 p.m. Sunday -two-hours before Kosygin and President Nikolai' V.
the cease-fire e1pired -but caused Podgomy. "We discussed everything
no casua.ltles. Israeli artillerymen return-c:Jearly and frankly and I returned to
ed the fire. Cairo completely satisfied ... and con-
Neither the Palestinian guerrillas nor fident the Soviet Union is mai ntaining
the Syrians officially acapted the cease-ils positive support of our just struggle,"
fire , although the Syrians did not initi&te he said.
any fightlJfg during the seven·month -The ~Arab worldw generally greeted
truce. with joy Sadat's announcement the truce
Jn other Middle East developments : would not be officially extended. In
-Presl.dent Nixon, in an interview with Lebanon, Palestin ian refugees fired rifles
UPI White House correspondent Helen and pistols into the air to express their
Thomas, said botb the United States jubilation. Both Syria and Jordan put
and Soviet Union are exerting "a thei r military forces on full alert.
restraining effort" to keep Egypt and -Israeli foreign minister Abba Eban
Israel apart. "Neither side will gain said Israel would not open fire first
and both will Jose" if hostilities resume, but would maintain the cease.fire on
Nixon said. The President said ad-a reciprocal basis. "The 'crux of the
ministration foreign policy officials were matter now is whether fire is opened
trying to get a new cease-fire and "J or not," he said. A "voice of Israel"
am cautiously optimistic on getting a radio commentator said "a situation has
cease-fire." been created along the Suez Canal where
-Sadat, in a 28-minute television ad· any incident, however small, can lead
dress to the nation saying he would to a conflagration."
Massive Backlog
British Postal Strike
HaltedAfter 47 Days
LONDON (UPI) -Britain's postal
service creaked back into operation today
and began dealing with a backlog of
70 million pieces of mail acCumulated
during a 47-day strike.
Postal officials estimated about 11
million items were in the nation's inter-
nal pipeline waiting to be delivered
with another 60 million items overseas
waiting to come in.
The strike, one of the longest in British
history, cost the post office at least
$64 million.
The return of the mail was especially
welcomed by millions of pensioners,
many of whom do not have telephones.
Less happy with the envelopes falling
on the doorstep again were those who
went on buying sprees while temporarily
free of normal bills during the strike.
Banks reported countless accounts
were overdrawn during the past six
weeks while · people, especially young
couples, forgot about bills and used the
extra cash to buy expensive ilems.
"It's the day of reckoning for many,"
said one bank manager.
The order for the postmen to return
to work came Sunday from Tom Jackson.
Another 18,500 Navy men aboard the 7th
fleet vessels at sea were not Included
in the troop report but class.lfied as
''part of the U.S. commitment to
Southeast Asia."
Level of Y auks
In S. Vietnam
Cut by 4,000
SAIGON (UPI) -The level of U.S.
troop strength in Vietnam declined by
4,000 men last week to its lowest point
since October of 1966, the U.S. Military
Command said today.
Spokesmen said 322.200 American
servicemen 11i·ere in the war zone as
of March 6. President Nixon has oroered
that American troop strength be reduced
to 284,000 men by May l under the
"Phase Six" redeployment program.
The latest figures showed there were
242.800 Army men in Vietnam along
with 40,900 airmen. 22.400 Marines. 16.000
Navy men and 100 Coast Guardsmen.
of your 1best
have a new address. • • Glendale Federal Savings Save or gr~t new low rates on
has moved to Harbor Center. home loans, look no further.
Lock, stock and safe. People too. Glendale Federal/Costa Mesa
We're now right on the is just as nice as it ever was. And
comer of Harbor Boulevard and lo~ more convenient.
Wi Jl,n, so if you're looking for [CFS] Glendale's~famous friendly ~ry· Wion.-Thur. 94;
ice, exrows,_ Umpteeh Ways Jo . tp . 9-0.
•
~---
QlfiCllle Federal Savlr191·~ Mesa
C...cl llllbor IUt•dl Wllan. (Htrllor Cftlr)
•
•
• I
-
Huge Russ
Missll~
Reported ...
WASHINGTON (AP) -Sen.
-lltnry JL.Jacklon (0: ,
saya bit dilclosure that R""1a
Is deployll!g new long-range
mlstlles "polnts up the need
for an over.all agreement with
tho Soviet Union to Umlt both
offensive and defen1lve
weaPom.''
. 'lbe Wuhlneton senator11
disc!,.,,., IUpporled by the
Defenu Department, came
Sunday, only a weet before S DISCLOSURE U.S. aim Soviet negoUators MAKE "'turn to the Strat.gtc Arms __ s.n_._H_en_ry_J_•_ck-. __ _
Llmllatlon Talb ln Vlecna.
Victims li•lfed
Mowrcyc'le Club
Battfu Kilh 5
Monda)', March 8, 1971
Negro Chrirches
Hit by Firebombs
TEXARKANA, Tex. (AP) -1.,...i Negro church, Mount
Two Neil"' Baptist cllurebes Orange Baptlat. Tbe big cinder
were deslroyed by flamea and block bulldlnl wu'leduced to
CLEVELAND (AP) ~--members carried chalni, two others w'ere fire-bombed rums and Jta: pastor estiJDated
Police Prosecutor Everett; clubs and ~ over, the weekend In this Tex· damage at $200,000. • ":
t'bandler prepared riot and 'Three Or the dead we~ as-Arkansas border city, scene As firemen were Jirep8rlng
murder charges today agaiJ¥it Breed members -Bruce of recent racial disorder. to leave the scene of the first r ;..;..:I-
some of the 87 motorcycle Emerick, 31, of Vermilion, . 1 Two of the churches burned llilo
gang members arrested alter Obi Thom A '!) -B ·h· · 'T • ' early Saturday with damage blaze, an alarm was turaed a fight that left five dead and o; as . orry, ~. ay esting :. esthnat.d at $3'15,000. One WU ln for another fire at SL Paul
23 ·Injured, Including U... of Broadview Heights, • , fire.bombed later Saturday Baptist Cburdl.
pollcemen. Cleveland sub.ab; and Anilrew Out Water' and another was tho target -The Rev. B. c. -Green,
Police sald the Saturday C. Demeter, 30, Gf Soulb of.a fire bomb early SUDday. pastor at SL Paul, aid· be
nlgbt battle Involved llO to Amboy, N.J. MILWAUKEE, Wis. (UPI) PU. Marshal Ed Berbig, and other persons beard Wbat
200 memben of the Breed The otben, both Hell 's -Sen. Birch Bayh CO.Ind.). who said be expect.d a deputy sounded like an exp!-at
and 30 membera of the rival Angels, were EmeJiD Gardull, has sort of stepped into~ the state firt marshal to enter the rear of the church. "The
Hell's Ana;els., 32, of Bristol, Pa., and Jeffrey 1972 pres.idenUal race, but the lnvestigaUon, told a enUre rear sect1on of 'tne
They said tbe fight at the Coffey, 22, of New York. says be Will spend most of newsman, "I can iirove two church was 1n narna when
fourth an nu a I Motorcycle Ten of the 20 wounded the year testing the water ci them were arson." we beard the noise," be aald.
Cuslom and Trade Sbow on cyclisis remained bospital!zed before deciding on a formal A wind-whipped hlue early He ...t(mal<d damage ·at
the city'• · eut aide wu the in critical condlUon. campaign. Saturday destroyed the dty's '175,000.
nisult of a year·long feud .-----------'---'-'-"---------'----'-="-.:--'-'--'-"---'---'-----------------.
Eltate Toltl '
The full inventory of ,
the late Sen. Everett •
Dlrklen's .. 1ate, filed
last week in Illinois,
disclosed the senator .1
bad $53,379 in unspent •
campaign funds and a ~
total of '305,235 at the ;
time of bis death in 1
1969. '
II aJoo followed by U...
day1 Prelldezt Nilon's clear
"'Jectloo ol • Soviet proposal to reach qreement covering
antimllsilo defense ll)'llems
RJ>41'8tely from o f f e n 11 v e
weapom.
Une~cted
Rail Strike
Postponed -
between the two gangs. ~
The sbow was being held 1 ,
In the Han of the .As.soc.iatlon
of Polish Women in the U.S.
to raise money for crippled
children.
This timing led to specula-
Uon that the Nixon
Administration bad f e d
Jackson lnfonnaUon about the
new Russian missile devel~
ment.
Breed members gathered \
Though a Democrat and a
possible Nixon opponent next
year, Jackson agrees with the
admlnistraUon on Jn a n y
defense laauea.
The Whit. Hoose declined
.eommenl all« J~ said
bn TV, •"?be Russians are
now In the p.,.,... of "!Ploy-
ing a new generation. an ad·
vanced generation offensive
Jyttem."
5 Officers
Hit in NY
Shootout
wASHINGToN (UPI) -
The United Transportation
Union called a strike against
two major railroads Sunday
night but then voluntarily
postponed It unUI Thur.day
when the lines asked a federal
judge to hlock a walkout.
'I1le strike wu called
without advance notice for
midnight Sunday against the
Burlington Northern and the
Seaboard Coast Line railroads.
'lbe rapidity of the UTU
In calling it <if Indicated the
action was a strategy move
by the union since "selective
strikes" haVe been ruled il·
legal by federal judges in
90rne similar cases in the
past.
Negotiations aimed a t
avoiding a nationwide strike
were recessed Saturday -
without any date for new talks
-to allow each side to study
NEW YORK (UPI) -Fl. the other's offers and to
city policemen were shot,· prepare for more discussions.
near three motorcycles being
displayed by Hell's Angels and
somebody touched off the
fighting with a shout of
11Now!'' police said.
"We didn't tnow -where to
tum," said Patrolm!ID Thomas
Burton. who was ln the hall
when the figbUng began. "We
just started clobbering
everybody."
About l~ police converged
on the scene and tear gas
was used to break up the
mob.
Police said all of the dead
and wounded were knife vie·
t1ms. 1bey said g a n g
Court Bars
NY Teacher
Dismissals
seriously, in a shootout Sunda Union officials postponed the nl~ with a guM1all alleged! strike against Burlington and NEW YORK (AP) - A stat. .U·•'-g up an "adult" movie Supreme Court order has tern-'"¥' Seaboard until 2 p.m. EST thea near Times Square. Thursday to give U.S. District porarily blocked the Board of The gunman was killed at Education from beginning to-the Judge John H. Pratt time to day 8 series of economy
arrange a hearing on the that 1 cl de An alleged robbery ac. measures n u s the railroads' T"Plluest for a tem· dis •---! f 16 ·~ I -~---po~ ·--0 ---pcrary restraining o rd e r ti bstit te t cber y. against the strike. mos y su u ea s.
of the patrolmen were Selective _ or "whipsaw" The board said it would obey
from a hospital '_ strikes have been stopped the order and allow the city's
ing treatment for public schools to continue t.o 1'!"'4ot wounds. A lieutenant on three other occasions by hire 10,000 per-diem substitute
wounded five times itederal courts which ruled teachers, who bad been dUe
satisfactory condition .lhat when a union bargains to be laJd oU today . .. _ f .1.llectively with several com· as ~ ourth patrolman. qi The Jayoffs -which were )llnles, it cannot strike sele<'· ,_ ~~ M A police d e p a r t me n t 1 f w extend n~~ onday to cei-.. 11 an said the lieutenant, tilely against only 8 ew 0 lain full-time t e a c h er s ,
J Destefano, was shot them. supervisors and c I er le a 1
twi in the left arm, twice employes -were among
In left leg and onee in .1. I" • p "d measures ordered by the
the ght leg. The other officer .H'o ICICS 31 board last week to bridge a
ad ted for treatment was liAftTFORD, Conn. (AP) -$40 million gap between the
He Koster, shot once in '1lM beneficiaries of ·persons money it says It has and what
the gbt arm. The gunplay killed in two air crashes Jn. it needs to finish the school
took lace at the Avon-Orleans voltlng college football teams year. .
1bea r for mab.Jre adults oa bav! ~received $1.9 million The court order, signed SWl-
West 7th St. at 11:15 p.m. from'. insurance po 1lc1 es day by Justice Thom as
N er the dead man nor carried by the vtcUms the Russell Jones, stopped all cut.
the taken into custody Aetna Life and Casua1ty Co. backs until a hearing before
ediately identified. reports. him set for 9:30 a.m. Tuesday. =""'=="'===~ =----c=;::---
13 Floor Sampl~s & Discontinued
· 3 and 5 Piect Bedroom Sets, Go
On Sale _ T od~y at ~ PRl~E
Reqular $499.00 to $1395.00 W· $249 to $695 .
sos Ocld Chests· Dressers, Headboards,
Tables & Mipor~ All Go at 1/2 Price
COME .EARLY FOR BEST SELECTIONS!
H .. GAl\RE1T fURNf[URE .
PROFES NAL 221 S HARIOR ILYD.
INTERIO DESIGNERS op.. Mon., 11Han. & Fri. (yas. ~~S:ts MESA. ~:1,
hose buggers have
Clingtex" leg bands underneath the
nylon lace bimming thal do the Job of keeplng7ov
panty boeo 1inooth and unwrinkled. that bold np lo°'m$h "-
wlthonl prten, that ke<p glnlJea finnlrlo~
.... 1t10•don'• .... ,bo.. hose buggers!
SALE PRICES In e!Cect Cor 7 daya onlr
-1~~~:~1 =~· :::: ==
Mt.1"""• ....... lilt.t~OA.M.tetalOP.M.,....,11NIMtet ....
pannerfor
pantyhose
(now at terrific savings)
SAVE $land$2
on all of these
sale 399 to 499
regular •s and '7
Key to 1uCCe81 with panty hose: A Sean hose hugger
dipped on over them to enoure smoothne~ prevent
1ag and add the right meaoure of control and support.
And hose haggen do a superb job of holding ap long
otnll:h hooe without garters. Nylon and spandex lri-
cot body fabric ia ooft bot penuaoive. Center back
aeam for natural look. Color: Calla-Lilly (ivol')').
Regular$7, 17-lnch pantygirdle: S-M-r..x .... r, __ $4.99
Regular $7, Mid-leg: S-M.I. $4.99
Regular $5, Brief: S-M-I, $3.99
CHARGE IT on Sean Rovolvln& Charge
CK~ 1-.CO fAHTA fl lftlfftl
.._ ,.._. IANtA MOMCA
•ti'-I WA ,.... IOVTN CDAft fl&AIA ........................ , .. ....., ..... ---... ..... ...... -
..
.-. ..
'. ..
'
'
-,1
' • I I
~~--r---:=:...:!:::--===========~-==========================:..::~::;::~::::.::.::::::::::::::::::::;..;:::::;;;:::::::;~:;::::!~:..::::::::.::::::::::::::::::::::::..~~~~~~~~-------'
•
I
I
--.. . . . . .
• DAILY PILOT EDITORIAL PAGE
·Confidence Setback
The chairman of lhe Orange County Board o! Sji-
pervison continues to move in mysterious ways, as the
phrase ·goes, .and his actions have a way o( dimlnish-
inf confidence in county government.
After falling in bis early move to fire a competent
county administrative officer in what appeared to be a
Chicago-type power play, and to bend the Local Agency
Formation Commission to his whim, Board Cbairmap
Robert Battin bad another brainstorm.
Battin proposed a county ordina":ce which would
require lobbyists lobbying ·county government to regi.!-
ter and turn in monthly statements of expenditures on
behalf of their clients. The basic idea certainly is not
without appea1 -and, indeed, not without.merit.
At the ou~t, Battin was reporied wanting to ex-
clude lawyers (of \vhom he is one) from the ordinance.
Lawyers do probably 90 percent of the lobby~g in the
county.
But even when lawyer-lobbyists are included, the
proposed ordinance has serious defects. For example,
a representative of the California Taxpayers' Association
concluded Battin's wording could be interpreted to
classify reporters representing the public at large as
lobbyists.
Also. every person or firm with a product or serv•
Ice to offer to the county would be classified as a lobby·
ist. And a representative of the county's architects said
Battin's proposed law would infringe on the man·
ner in which licensed architect.! can work.
Battin, in the face of this pointing. to naws, petul·
anUy defended bis proposal, saying its purpose was
"full disclosure of the persons and amounts to be spent
to influence the board."
NeitJier lb~ bar association nor anyone else quar-
rels with this purpose -if he is concerned wit.Ii hon·
esty in government -but an ill~nsidered catch-all
ordinance, 1!9tenlially d1magln& to sovernment opera-
tion, i.! someih.ini else again. ·
Joining In ••king tor !urtber consideration .of all
the ramifications were the Orange Coun\y Bir Assocla·
tion, the Orange County Chapter of the American In·
stitute of Arch.Jtects, the California Council of Civil
Engineers and Land Surveyors, and the l:.eague of
Women Voters. , · , .
Battin had called for his ordinance to be rushed
through on an "urgency" basis, as thougli county· cov·
ernment faced an immediate crisis, wit& supef.vJsors
too mindless to resist the blandishments of lobbyists.
Battin bad his usual support from Filth District
Supervisor Ronald Caspers, but no more. It W~s a. 2 to ·2
vote, with Supervisor Ralph ·Clark. absent .in Hawaii.
Further action was delayed pencliug·bis return.
It may well be that Orange CQunly would benefit
from an ordinance requiring. lobbyists to register and to
divulge certain deta~ls of their activities. But why a
hastily drawn proposal s~t · throUgh with tµJstakes
should be hustled into law under the banner of ''ur-
gency" is beyond understanding. Whether it should be
viewed as an immature playing with power or as a slick
power play, the result is the same. Confidence in the
county board sufiers anothex setback.
What's a Few Bucks?
Speaking of things beyond understanding, tonight
is the liistoric night when hundreds of thousands of
Americans are scheduled to eagerly shell out large
sums of money for the questionable privilege of seeing
Muhammed Ali and Joe Frazier earn $2.5 million
apiece for hitting each other.
Between rounds. the f8DJ will no doul>t complain
about high taxes for such non-essentials as public
schools, parks, hospitals and clean environment. ,. s
' I ' ' Hope ls
Essential to
Dear
Gloomy
Gus:
How to Communi~te Without Nagging
Democracies
Tiloapta at Lorge:
The only lesaon we can learn from
history is that people will behave well
when they are filled with hope , and
badly when they are filled with fear;
this I.a wtiy demoaacies flourish on hope,
and dictatorships rise only when fear
overwhelms the citizenry. • • •
Wh.tt tile activist
forgets 1.s that oace
you have done a
daring and desper-
ate deed, you no
longer control it -
the deed's possible
range of consequen-
ces then controls
you, and may force
you Into subsequent
acts wholly uJ1!oreseen at the beginning
of the adventure. • • •
The journal, Environment Monthly,
provides the most tangible illustration
of our polluted atmosphere, in ils
citation: "If all pollutants "-'ere suddenly
removed from the air, their mass would
"'"eigh 133 million tons -a greater
amount than the total national steel
production." • • •
I wonder how many children. go
through school. as 1 did. rec iting the
Pledge of Allegience and puzzling to
themselves how our nation w a s
''invisible'' -because "indivisible" had
never been explained to them? (Like
the child who thought her country was
named "Tis of thee ... ) • • •
An army breaks step when it crosses
a bridge, lest lbe lock-step of marching
should collapse the structure: the lesson
to be drawn here is that a social
struclure, also, can break unde: t.he
How much longer before our U.S.
one dollar bills are worth less
than the paper they are printed
"'' -!. T. M.
Tiiis ...,.,.. '9flKtl ,...,..... "'"" ""' _..,.,,. .._... .t ,._ ........-. SllNI
-"' -... ...., .... °'4tJ ,.llltt.
pressure of everyone marching to the
same beat, and that "unlty" must not
be used as a slogan to repress diversity.
• • •
l.lost sermons preached on t h e
•"aJueltssneas" of material possessions
are designed to keep the many satisfied
with thelr liUle, rather than to make
tile few dlssaWfied with their lot.
• • •
One of the remaining plusses of city
living wu neatly underscored by Peter
De Vries, when he observed: "A
suburban mother's role is to deliver
children -obstetrically once, and by
car forever after." • • •
The whole mini-midi controversy is
ludicrous on both sides for a woman
should wear the length that is most
pleasing and appropriate to her legs,
her age, her gait, and the occasion
for which it is worn: all other
considerations are servile and self·
de!eaUng. • • •
\Vealth depends upon art if i c i a I
scarcity: if the other side of the moon
should turn up vast deposits of gold,
enough to make every puson jn the
world "rich," then the earth would
immediately go off the gold standard
and firid some other rare medium or
fiscal worth. • • •
When TV was born. it.s <!ultural critics
were enjoined to be patient, because
.. the medium is just in Its infancy.,:
now TV has come of voting age, and
it'• just as infantile, irrespansible, and
greedily stupid as it was 21 years ago
-and the critics are still asked to
"wait."
A Child Is Ofteri Difficult to Fool
There is a sense in which a child
understands far more thall we :ruspecL
Because a child doesn't understand words
too well (and also because bis nervom
system is not yet deadened by years
spent as an accountant, advertlsing ex-
ecutive or professor
Of pbjlosopl!y). •
child attends not OJI·
ly what we say but
to everything about
us as we say it -
tone of voice, ges-
ture, facial expres-
sion, bod i I 1 ten-
"sioos, and so on. I
think that be •I·
tendJ to a conversa-
tion between crow~
ups with the same amJ.dll ablorptjon.
1ndeed, a child li3tenlng is, I hope,
like a good psychiatris.t. listening -
or like a good semanticist listening -
because he watches not ~the ·Words
but also the nonverbal events to which
words bear, all too often, so unceraUn
a relationship. Therefore a chUd is in
some matters quite difficult to fool,
especially on the subject of your true
altitude toward him. For this reason
many parents, without knowing it, arf:
to a greater or leu .degree in the
situation of the worried mother who
said to the psychiatrist to whom she
brought he.r child, "I tell her a dozen
times a day that I love her, but the
brat sUll hates me. Why, doctor?"
"LIFE JN A BIG CITY is dangerous,"
a mother once said to me. "You hear
so often of chlldren TUM.ing thoughtlessly
out in the street and being struck by
pasting cars. They will never learn
unless you keep telling them and telling
them."
Thil is the kind or communication
theory that makes otherwise nice women '
into nagging mothers. You've got to
keep telling them. 'I1len you 've ' got to
remind them. 1ben tell 'em again. .
Are there na better ways to ·teach
children not to run out into the street?
Of courge.. there are. I think it wa~
done in our family without words.
Whenever my wife crossed the street
with our boy Alan -he was then
about 3 -she would come lo a stop
al tbe curb whether there was any
traffic in sight or not, and look up
and down the boulevard before crossing.
It soon became • habit.
SO ONE DAY I absent-mindedly
started crossing the street without look·
. !
if!g up and dawn-the street wu empty.
Alan' grabbed my coat and pulled me
back on the curb to look up and down
before we started out again. Children
Jove to know the right way to do things.
They learn by imitation far more than
by precepL
The degree to which people rely un-
critically on the efficacy of words amazes
me constantly. Once when we were living
in an apartment house, I heard a great
commotion in the concrete courtyard
behind the building. I looked out and
saw a father teaching his boy to ride
a bicycle.
The father was shouting instructions:
"Keep your head up. Now push down
• with yOlD' left foot. Now loc:ik out, you're
running into the wall Steer away from
it. Steer away from it! Now push down
with your right foot. Don't fall down!"
and so on and so on. The Poor boy
was trying to keep his balance, manage
the bicycle, obey his father's instructions
all at the same time. He looked about
as totally confused as it is possible
for a little boy to get.
WELL, ONE THING we learn from
semantics, if we haven't already learned
it some other way, is that there are
limits to what can be accon'lplished in
words. ·Learning to ride a bicycle is
beyond tnose limits. And having sensed
those limits, we become content to let
many things take care or themselves
without words. All this makes !CC' a
quieter household.
Not that wor'ds are not lmp:itw1t.
They are the chief means by which
human beings att socialized.
Ha ve you wondered why tetn-agus
spend st much time on the phone?
They talk on and on and on, an~ grown·
ups wo!Kier what the're is ta talk about
that takes so much time. &rnetimes
young people even hang on to the phone
for n1ibutes, listening to each other's
silencel.
w8'rs GOING ON II RE~
It sei/ms to me that adoles nee is
the period during which t child d·§' ers the possibility . of com-muni ation outside the family . p-the
e1ci g world of stringers ol 's own
age ho, through the exchange o words.
c~ 1become friends, The younJ person
at ~ stage is becoming less d leSJE
th~child of his parents and m e and
m a member of his own g ration
-he generation ·whi ch, for ter or
nf i.ng the world in a few ye
wf.j, will have to tak.e over the iness
it's part of growing up.
if you can afford it, you s ~ adolescents in your home ha
n phone line. It's better
Ls .waiting for them to hang up.
I By S. I. Ba akawa
sldent
Ue11
White House Is ,Tightly Protecte,d
\VASHlNGTON -The bombing .of the
Capitol btlilding. has raised urgent ques-
tions about White House security. Could
those modern know-nolhlngs, \\'ho prac·
Lice the politics of the burled brick and
the dynamite charge, plant a bomb
anywhere near the President?
The reassuring fact is that the White
Roust, despite its pastoral setting, sits
ran over It with a lawn mower. But
even this harmless, unpublicized incident
probably couldn't be repe.ated today. The
grei:ta.de thrower almost certainly would
be •potl<d.
THE SECRET SERVICE is more wo,...
ried about the distingui shed visitors
newsmen, aides and even bodyguard$
who have personal access to the
President. Distinguished visitors can't
be searched without offending them, an~
the most trusted associates can go
berserk. •
ed up. But the late dea~ of White
House correspondents, Merrl:nan Smith,
overheard the man md!tering in--
coherently that he intended 'to kill I.he
President. Smith lunged at the man
and grabbed him around tht neck.
TflERE WAS A brief tu J e. The New
York reporter slammed Snith to the
floor and stomped on ~face. But Secret Service agents qui y moved in
and hustled the berserk respondent
away.
'Love Story' Snubbed
in the center ol an
electronic entangle-
ment that has never
failed to pick up in·
truden.
Back in Lyndon
JOO.son's day, the
Secret Service ran
a security test at
Ca m p David and
succeeded in infiJ.
The tourists who atn:am through the
White House five days a week are hustled
through the hist<l"lc rooms and are kept
under constant surveillance.
During the Eisenhower era, the mind
of a White House correspondent sudden11
snapped on a presidential trip. He was
one of the trusted White House regulars.
representing a great New Y o r k
newspaper.
The incident, until now, has been hum-
Security is necessarily intensive around
Air Force One, the presFntlal plane.
AU luggage is carefully Jhspected for
hidden weapons. Crewmen Me ordf'red
never to let the baggagf out ol their
sight. SQUABBLE: New American Library
has called for a tenth printing of tbe
paperbound edition of Erich SegaJ's in-
nocuous little novel "Love Story," bring-
ing the total copies in print to 6.7 million.
The hard-cover edition, oddly enough still
toP, the N"'eW York Tunes naUOIUlil best•
seller list after 49 \veeks,
This pluS the box office succe~s of
the Ali McGraw-Ryan O'Neal movie
version spells nothing but cheer for the
author, a ,youngish professor or classics
at Yale.
TO OBSERVERS of Establishrrl,nt
literary prfte·giving, It wa' not surprising
U1at ••Lov' Story" was thrown out as
a candidate !or the: t0veled Fiction
Award of the N1tional Book Committee.
The five-member Cictk>n jury threaten-
ed to resign ll "Love Story" was nom-
inat.ed. A juror-spok~man, \Vllllnm
Styron (•'The Confessions cf Nat Tur·
ner") was quoted : .. It 1¥ • banal book
... Simply by belng on the list it would
ha ve demeaned the otht.r books."
Quotes
Vlrglal• l\lule Rodaadl, Soutl• S.P.
-"We all are ena:aged in an endless
pursuit l or the one quality in Ufe which
wil l 1rant f u I f 111 m e n t , uUsfaction,
F.ecurlty. and above all, happinesa. This
quality is love."
lrating the presidential retreat in Mary.
land's CatocUn Mountains. The f\farines
who guard Camp David sheepishly tight·
~ ened up their security.
EriCh Segal, by the way, tr a National 4 JU.Fr SIMILAR attempts to peortrate
Book Award judge, with Lillian Helman the White House grounds have failed.
and Thomas Lask. in the Arts & Letters Infiltration teams have never been able
category. to slip past the all-seeing electronic eyes
, . that the Secret Service began installing
"LOVE ~RV' is perhaps ~t in around the White House 20 years ago.
the league with previous NBA fiction OCtaslonal Intruders who have climbed
winnen -Nelson Algren11 ''The Man over the White Hou~ fence Dave been
With the Golden Arm" to Ralph Ellison's picked up u fut as th~y set foot
"Invisible Man." But it stands up with on the lawn. ,
some of the long-forgotten curlostty About to years ago, someone managed
pieces that have bee:n nominated for to Olp a hand grenade-happily, a
these $1000 accolades over the past t'>l·o dud-over the fence . Jt ~·ent undetected
decades: and, I think, with a couple i:ntll a member of the grounds crtw or this year's nominees, the second-chop ·
John Updike. "Bech: A Book," and
Vance Bourjaily's "Brill Among the
Ruin!."
It may M a matt(l'r er commt.rcial
tiuccess that upsets the Establishment
literati as well as the fact a modem
boy·meeta-glrl fairy tale could capture
lbe naUOnal Ima gination the way "Love
Story'CJlll done. I bold no brief for
the stjil book. -obviously not the
"most dlst.lnguishtd "'ork of fiction
published In 1170." Styron and <.'Omp&nY
miaht simply have not voted ror Segal
and tor gotten lbe pompDSity.
WJlll1m Ho1a1
r
B11 George --~
Dear George:
How does ll feel to be dependent
on lcLtera from the crackpot.a cf
the nation? •
ANNOYED
Dear Annoyed:
1n your case it feels HJ)tnSive
-your letter came: postage due.
tSend your problema to George
and h.a ... e your "'Orrying done by
professional Incompetents.)
I
Government Liability
"Smog Warning" may be a sign of
the times. Jn a rectnt case a county's
failure to warn made: ii liable. for Injury. ~'
For days a brush fire had plagued
the county and dense slllOke filled the
air, in one plat"e where It crossed I.ht!!
freeway. The county highway department
placed smaU signs which one could bare-
ly tee In the smo1 •nd haze. One motorist
had a bad accident because he could
not see.
BW.. SUED TIIE county for h.is in·
juries. And •t hJs trial his lawyer put
on expert proof that the: roadsigns were
too small for that strip of highway.
1'le county had not taken adequate care
to put flares or otherwise. warn lhe
motmisl The city had known or the
fires and smog for aeveral days. The
dty had not taken proper action to
proltct motorists. Bill could make the
county pay for his Injuries .
The government Is llable. just like
private clthens, for dangerous and de.fee·
Uve condlU111>4J a proptrty ov.ner
the government must act reasonably.
E1ample1: inadequate highway signals
and Jijhls. ftully stop signs. lack of
signs. shrubbery t0verlng a sign, failure
to warn of 1 sharp curve, a suddt.n
..
bottleneck, or an unguarded hole nr
a slippery surfa~.
f\IERE FAU..URE 'to install control
signals Is generally not negliR;ence. But -
removal of a sign, say for repairs.
without warning is negligence.
Before the government becomes liable,
ii must have notice or should be aware
of the dangerous condition. But notice
can bt ''consfructive notice" wh.ich arises
from lhe long-continued e1istence or a
defecti ve condiUon. The fact that there
have been many other accidents btcause
of inadequate warning In a place may
itself be pit needed "constructive
notice."
The state also needs enough Lime to
correcl the dangers. If they a.rise , say,
from an unexpected storm wllidJ ca uses
3-traffic signal tn be sluck ~ "go.'-'
the city 1s not liable if ll lacked time
to correct it.
Note: California la1vytrs of/t r thi.T
colt•mn so uow moy know about our
law1.
I
On rare occasions, a c-ewman has
turned away from the '11ggage long
enough to buy a cigarette or a Coke.
Quickly. quietly, Air Force {ecurity m"n
have ta.ken advantage ol kls: inattenti on
to plant smoke bombs in De luggage.
When the crewman has &covered the
smoking luggage, he has Dt!n reminded
that il could have been a rl!li bomb.
Conclusion: The chancesm poor that
the know-nothings will be ~~lf to blow ' up any of the presidential f · !cs.
---IUiiji-
Monday, Marc~1971
Tiit editorial pagt o :ht DaUit
Pilot 1etks to tnf md 1tfm..
ulatt rt4dtrs by 'Pf"' ting thia
ntwspapcr't opinl~ 6nd com-
mentary O'tl toplci ~ Interest
and dgntfkanct, bt1 ", "dingo a
forum for the e uion o/
our readers' opinfo •, and b'
prtst nttng tht d · se triewa ....tou of mfonn ob11,,,,_ Om! spokt.mttn on Cl of the
day.
RDbert N. Weed i'ublisher
•
Mond•y, March 8, 1Cf11 DAIL V Pt LOT 7
CHECKING 2-year S r • en1or Colleges Loo1n
Up WASHINGTON (AP) -'nle Atlantic at Boca Raton, with leges' has been dramaUc, ln year insUtuUons and not ex-
• • ~nal growth' of the na-6,000 students, and University 1930, 1ccolding to t be pect to become four.year or
doll's two-year junkr or com-of Florida West at Pensacola Carnegie Comm.lnlon on graduate institutions."
munlly colleges ' ls spawning with 3,500 students. Similar Higher Education\ there were Dr. Peter l\lasiko, president
Pull of Ripcord ,
'
a new brttd of biiber educa-schools, named Flor Id a Jess lhan ZOOiOOO students of Mi.a.mi-Dade Junior College,
Uon lnsUtutlon: the tw1>year International at Miami and enrolled lo tw1>year schools. one of the nation's largest
seolor college. University of Florida North By 1971> enrollment bad grown two-year schools with 34,000
Florida ls a pioneer ln the in JacksonviUe. are.scheduled to i mJlllon, Educators fulltime students. said the
field but interviews with to open in the fall of 1972. estimate that in this decade junior college can give "better
educators al a convention'here Jack G. Guistwhite, director junior college enrollment wiU quality teaching, better qua\i-
dlsclosed that both ptivale aad of inter-institutional relations double. ty .counseling and guidance lo
publlc institutions in New at Florida-Atlantic, said in an P..tost junior colleges offer the begin11ing student'' than
York, Pennsylvania, lllinois. interview al the American ·comprehensive program s the traditional (our -ye a r
Opens Nightgo-wn
.
By L. M.·89YD
I Texas, Michl g an and Association of Junior College coveriflg academic, oc· undergraduate college.
CUSTOMER SEIJ,VJCE -Q. ' California are experlmenling convention that 65 to 70 per-cupatlonal and general educa-Dr. John G. Berrier, presi-
1'My boyfriel)d, wooiSpent last with the concept. cent of the senior college tion programs. The Carnegie dent of Lehigh Community
summer in France; calls me Open 01dy to co 11 e g e students are junior college CommiSilon in its study en-CoUege near Allentown, Pa.,
on ruearch and writing and graduates went on to college.
"don't think of \he individual" Today nearly 7$ percent seek
who needs guidance on en-post secondary 1 c h 0 0 I tering college. .
Florida's two-year senior1.·_1_,_•i_n_mc.g_. -------
colleges, Berrier said, "are
~tting the pace {or all or
us."
t.1iami-Dade's Masiko said
his state's two-year schools
have been to stimulant to
education. Before junior col-
leges were sel up. he said,
less than 50 percent of
Florida 's high school
Kids Like RA VE YOU heard abo\it
The Nat. ~tep gr00p 1 'l'hat,
I'm reliaJ;>ly inf'QMJled, is a
San Frar:icbco outfit set up
to help . roriner priests and
nWl..'I rn,eet and D:Mte • . .
IN THE I' TEAMS or the
National Hockey ~e there
are 252 players. Anif in those
252 players this season, it's
estimated, doctors ill! lake
4,200 stitches ... ~ so
COLD here my wlllskey
froze ... writes a Fairbanks,
Alaska, reader. That's mighty
add. Whiskey rreeies at
minus 55 degrees F.
·rus little 'pdlilarde/ 'ls· that 6tudents with junior or-senior gradua_tes. .(tor~Jhl:i t~ of school and .agreed. He said too many To Al.Sk Al. -dy
good?" A. Good maybe. But. _:.:•ta::•::d::illl:::::·..:F_:l•:.:".:..d::•c.h_:•_:•_F_l.:.or_id.-•_· __ G_roc_wth __ o_r_th_•....:lil_nl_o_r_co_l_· _••_i_d_th_•.:Y_'..:'s_hou_ld.:_ie_m_ai_·n_1w_o-__ r_:ou_r..:·Y:..•_•_r_s_ch_oo_ls_co_·n..:ce_n..:t_ra_:t• ____ ,,. ____ ,.,, __ • ___________ _
not superior. It means fat;-
A WELL-TO-DO TEXAN,
whose house has iatercoms
in every room . backs up his
occasional parties there with
canned laughter. Tuned low.
Just a mild murmur or ho-ho
and hee-hee from e v e r y
speaker. He says it tends to
heighten . t..be spirits of his
guests. They rfde the lively
mood. And when he turns off
_the background, s u d d e n I y
everybody decides to go home,
mostly unaware they've been
s.hut down by push buttons.
ONE DR. WJLLIA~J
SW ARTLEY has designed a
ladies' nightgown that falls
apart with the pull of a rip-
cord. What do you make of
that? Dr. Swartley is a
psychologist who specializes fn
promoting harmony in the
home . , . THE LAW JN
Whitesville, Del .. prohibits a
girl from proposing
matrimony to her gentleman
friend. When it's invoked,
rarely, rarely. the defendants
have been charged w i t h
disorderly condu ct.
chicken, Isn't that where Wi!
got the word lard?'. Think: so
• , • Q. "What's the · biggest
bet you can make in Las
Vegas on one toss of U1e
dice?" A. Now it's $1,00J. Us·
ed to be $500.
AS TO THAT matter of why
we call the widow's peak by
that name, am advised it goes
back to King Louis VI. He
decreed au widows must have
their hair to a point in the
center of lhe • forehead. SO
prospective suitors m i g h t
recognize their .status an sight.
Not such a bad notion, that.
Our Love and War man ap-
proves. .
JUST 3' C~ a year.
That's how much it costs each
citizen of London to clean up
that city's pollution. And the
campaign there is working,
loo. Tests show London's
streets are getting half again
as much sunlight as t.bey got
10 years ago. Smoke in the
air has been cut back by 80
percent. Visibility has imp~
ved thrce-lold. And twice as
many birds Oy,
RAPID REPLY -Yes, sir,
shredded wheat was invented
before corn Dakes, corn flakes
before Grapenuts.
Your questions and com-
ments are welcomed and
will be used in CHECKING
UP wherever possible. Ad-
dress letters UJ L, M. Boyd,
P. O. Bo7: 1875, Newport
Beach, Calif., 92660.
One Large 8x10 and
Six Lovely Wallet-Size
Portraits of Your Child
5aa
Hurry )n now for Iha most spectacular portrait
event 'n town! You'll get a big, beautiful Bx1D
for yoa and she channing wallet1ize for family
and friends, A fine portrait of your child Is
always a warm and wanted gifl Remember •••
you can charge It al Penneysl
l\nn~t
PULLl•TOM
Ot•l!Ol'l•lr (..,!Cf 2nd ooor, 111 . .i~
MUHT!HOTON 1£•C:H NIWP'OltT llACM
HllO'ltlt19IOP1 (et'l•r F1thlon ltlend
7nd floor, m-1n1 1nd llOOr, t+t-JJll
Or•11tt ''Th• (llr'" Uf·SOtt
Our th '
Anniversary.
Saving was never
so exciting.
Our best selling
towels 15%oft -· ' .
Not just onllM<y m.18, but our moot
papular .,.---n patterns. Choose intricate jacquard woven -.nfatuation" or
sheared print "Rcoe Mist" All cotton tony,
wtth fllnged lace and balh --
::\~.-148
--.. nig, Ilic, --Hand towol, ftlG. 95c. Now 80c
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
ennelfl
CttARGE-'RIESrV~S AT YOUR LOCAL PENNl:Y STORE!
" -• '
(
'
. . .
Jane Fonda S et,s Cam-paign
Of Massi ve Peace Drive
[~1111 ~ ... , '' -~' .1 · J 11£:•
~ . 1---.... .. .--~ : ~t Iii .
SAii l"llANCISCO (UPI) -
AdNI J1111 Fooda, blazlng
a ectlYtlt. trail across tbe
-,. , visited fallllll Com-
-1st Aqela Davis Sunday
and tben called re< a sprln&
pe1C1 otfenslve of .. maaive
civil dilob«Uenct" la the DI•
UOn'a clUes.
Clad in a maroon awe1ter
and blue jeans, Mioa F~ new to San Francbco from
Las Vegas where she led near·
1y 2,000 mazdJen Saturday
Beauty Bulletin
from Penneys:
In honor of our 69th
Anniversary, we've
reduced our Sue Cory
'Essence of Lemon' perm
from '15 to Just 9.66.
And that Includes
shampoo, cut, and aet.
Come help us celebrate.
"ULLallTOM HUWTIJMTOll •PQJ NIWf'OllT llACM ~•Ir c.nlel' H\lrlllftglOll Glntw FNJon 11191111 ...,. '"'°'· l1Ml4 ,,.. "'*'· .,,.1111 2nc1 ,...,, ......u1a
OUMI "'Tiie Cit\"" ......,
...
down the "Slrfp11 and into
caslnol to protest Nevada
welfare cut.I.
After visiting /Jlgela In the
Marin COunty Jall and ad·
dressing a rally for the "Har ..
rlsburg Sis", Miss Fonda flew
W New York to begin
rehearsals tocfay for an an ..
Uwar skit she ptam to stage
t1 b<. . 1 I ... ,
,
" ,,
outa;de tbe gales ol Fort 'N~EP DISOBEDl ~NCE'
Bragg, N.C. next weekend. Actr ... J•n• Fonda
"What we need is civil----------
disobedience," ~tiss Fonda
said in announcing the spring
offensive at the University of
San Francisco. "What we need
is laying our lives, our bodies
on the line in massive pro-
tests."
The antiwar coalition plans
called for hunger strikes and
poor people's marches, in-
cluding a "mule train down
Wall Street," and April 19
Vietnam veterans' march on
, Washington; mass demonstra·
tiOl'I! in the capital and
San Francisco April 24, and
a May 5 business stoppage
"in every city of this cOun-
try."
Miss: Fonda said Angela
Davis was ••beautiful, strong
and free" despite her m..
carceration in an isolated cell.
"Her morale is just fine, just
fine," the actress said.
California utradiled Mi.a
Davis from New York recently
on charges of buying the guns
Uled in a courtroom escape
attempt that ended In the
death of four persons including
a Marin County judge.
Tate Case
Arguments
Winding Up
LOS ANGELES (UPI) -
The Tate-LaBiancae murder
trial entered its tenth month
today with the defense er·
peeled to conclude Its cue
by the mldd1e of the week
clearing ·the way for closing
arguments.
One of the last witnesaes
for the defense was recently
elected California Attorney
General Evelle Younger, who
was District Attorney here
when the trial began J u n e
15. He apparenUy wu sum-
mooed by Olarles Mani-Oil's
lawyer, lM"& Kanarek.
The defense bas lndlcaled
It will ml Its case In tbe
five--week:Oid penalty phase of
the trial by the middlt ol
the week.
14 Months, $11,000
Big Naples Family
Finally Reunited
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Fourteen months and $11 ,000
after they planned it, the near·
ly 200 members or the Joseph
Naples family had their reu-
nion.
"We didn 't think this would
come to a reality," said Marie
Scardina, 59, one or IS children
of the late Joseph and UJ.ciUe
Naples 0£ Chicago.
Mrs. Scardina said the fami·
Jy decided in Chicago 14
months ago to hold a reunion
in California.
It CO!t fl ,000 for 55 family
members to fly round trip
from Chicago. Some stayed
at their relatives in the San
Fernando Valley during ' the
reunio• 1a!t weekend. others
were put up in a motel, the
entire second floor of which
had been rented.
The cost of travel and BC·
commodations here w a s
financed through the family
members, garage sales, flower
sales, dinners and square
dances.
1be idea for the get-together
was hatched by Mrs. Naples
1n 1944, who wanted to fonn
a family club which would
meet once a month.
That idea "just grew and
grew," said Mrs. Scardina.
All 13 of the surviving
children of Joseph Naples at-
tended, So did 86
grandchildren, 79 gr e at·
grandchildren and IO great.
great..grandchildreR.
NOWl LONG BEACH IS SHORTER
TO NORTHERN CALIFORNIA.
•••••• .-.... ~ •••• ~ .... #" •••• ••••• . ' .... _.
Death Row
P risoner
Stabbed
SAN QUENTIN (UPI)
A convicted kkinaper on San
Que:ntln'I 0 Deatb Row" WU
stabbed in the chest Sunday
by another condemned
prisoner who had constructed
a 30-incb knife from a bed
spring and a broom handle.
Million L. McShane, a 29-
yW'<lld J.oa Angeles man wbo
UCL4 PROF
STRANGLED
LOS ANGEi.ES (UPI)
Pollce Issued .. all-polnls
buDetln Sunday !or three men
aeen drtvinr a stolen car away
!n1m a bome In which a UCLA
prof....,. wsa round strangled.
Richard Montague, to, was
found on the bathroom noor
of his $a1,000 west Los Angeles
home by land!cape arcltitect
John 0 . Westerdoll, who
!hared the house with him.
Westerdoll aaid he saw three
men drive away in a car
be had loaned Montague tbe
night before.
Legislation Due 0
On Welfare Plan
SACRAMENTO (UPI) -
Legblatloll Incorporating ma-
jor features of Gov. Ronald
Reagan's proposed overhaul of
welfare and Medi.cat is ex·
peeled to be introduced this
wef:k.
bllce b lnevllable tbis year.
Vila! pirll cl the mtnrctur·
mg -"'m -wblcb R<apn
outlined Jut week Jn a 181).
page message to lawmakers
-include ''f amily
responsibillty'" to s u pp o r t
welfare memben, meeUng re--
qulremant.s of lhe "truly
needy" by trlmmlng payments
for the 11afOuent poor" and
requirJD( the ·~ to work.\ .:.. lddnaped and robbllll a taxi---------
The governor has said that
CllifomJa tupayers will face
an increase thls year. and
every sucCeeding year unless
the multi-billion dollar pr~
grams lcr the needy are
reformed this year. 'lbe bills
will play a key role in balan-
cing his $5.7 billion state
budget.
Democrats eomplalj\ed tha!
the Im 11!9Sl.on already was
more than two mouths old
and tbe govemcr 'ha..,'t sent
lawtno.ken bllls an whidl to
act.
driver three yean ago, was
in satisfactory condiUon after
being stabbed once in the left
breastbone.
Prison officials said a
Police Seek
More Clues
But Democrat! In the Senate
and Assembly insist a tax --~~-~~ D t I t• after the homemade knife was eo:~W:mic{iTe'IJi~tig~= en ure nven ion
found in his cell -shorUy after visited the campus of Pacific
t•-1 •• In klent H Union College hei'e this For"People with ''Uppers'' and 0 Lowen." In:: :w p.m. c . e WU
t Id "fled weekend in search of some The nea.reat thing to having Y!>W' helps~ f\lml fmn bruilinC;
no enu · clue to the mysterious death own t.etth i1 pollibJe now with a You may bite harder, cbnr bet• Lee Debord, San Quentin of~ of a '.IL ....... -old coed whose pla1tic rnam di!ICOVerf that ac--ter, eat moce naturally. ficer of the day, said Sirhan ...r;r....,,,, tually holds both "uppers" and F1XOOl!N'r may help you iq:ak
S'-h th d d body was found in a shallbw ••kiwen" 81 never before possible. more clearly .• be mm:e at~·, u an, e con e m n e grave near her abandoned 1t'• a revolutionary diac.overy The 1pec1al pencd-po1nt d1"' assassin of Sen. Robert Ken-automobile. called FixOOEN,., for daily home ptJ*I' lets you epot F1xoor:Nt
nedy, was in no way involved. L·....1 .. Christlne Kanes of '*· <U.S. Pat~f3.003,988J With with precilion ••• whm needed I "St~ I led r ,,......, FIXOD&NT many denture ware.rt One application may la.it lot i-uan 5 segrega rom Porterville disappeared Feb. now eat, meak, laugh, with little hour1 .. Denture1 that fit are
the other men. He had 26 and her body was foWld worry or clenturea comine looet:. e1aent1al to health. Set your
absolutely nothing to do wiUt with a fractured skull, a wire F1xoo!NT form• an elastic dentist ~y. Get :.'::'
this," Debord said. noose wrapped around the membrane that helPI at.orb the uae F1xoo'IHT Denture A
The incident, which was not _:neclt:::,:and::_::•:um::eroos,::::.'.b'.'.:ru'.'.'.is".'.":·~=-==·='=b=;"°'=· =an=d=ch<=. -=·=-=Qam==·='=.U=dni&=-====: witnewd by .. y ol lhe prison r·
guards, toot place during an
exercise period.
"There were about 18 men
In the exercise area at the
time ol. the lncldent. None
of lhe oecurily penomrel !mew
what bad happened 1!!llil
McShane walked up to a
guard, pulled up his shirt and
sOOwed him the wound,"
DeBord added.
Car Smashes
Dµn e Buggy
KiJJing Four
HARBOR CITY, Ca 111.
(UPI) -Two children and
two adults were killed and
two other children seriollsly
injured Sunday when the dune
buggy they were riding in col·
llded head on with another
vehicle on the Pacific c:out
Highway.
The driver of the eecoad
car, Joseph Huber, 'IO, Lomito,
Calif., was booked•on wsp}.
tion of manslaughter.
Authorities said hls Cadillac
crossed a double yellow line
and demolished the fiberglass
vehicle.
Dead were Lonnie Carrillo,
29, Lomita, Ca1if.; his son,
Lonnie Andrew, 6; Fred Crit.
tenden, 29, Highland, and his
daughter Caren Renee, 5.
-'
Order a room
full of sunshine
and save30%
,)
l!lllt """ ....
Twin SS -41M
Ful 188 -· -m -King m IUO ................. _Ndueld.,.
It's PenneysYOrf spocial-ator-
of aun"9Plashed bedroom coordlnlta Lux·
urioua Trevlra•polyoater, Im-rr-Gtr·
many, 112 lncheswkfeto makeyourbedlpread
In one beautilut p--no......, no ~
intem.iptlon, tven kl I dual kingl Spn9da
quilted to Kodel• polyeotor fibtrt111, 11yton
backed, with r&VWM 8halM and dleorator
edges. Practical, too-U-eltgol)I .,._ ... c:omplotely ..... ___ ..,_
cust~ mad.a draperltl for the eu""lllt f'DOnl
In tqwn. In solids and 7 printa-21colorco.
blnaUons ln all.
Cell COiiect: (714) 523-6511
for our Shop at Home SeMce, free.
Long Beocl1 to Los Angeles (Orange COunly, Palos
San Francisco $19 Verdes, Wilmington, Torrance, etc.), l\nnelf• Including tax. l ong Beach Is like having your own prfvate
Lt11V• Long Bt1ach: airport. You don't have to fighl the free·
Now you can tly PSA from Long Beach 7:.0 am way traffic lo LA. lnlemalional. There't
Airport to San Francisco. Four times a day. 10:~ am easy parf<Jng. And !he crowds haven'I
·More on week9')ds. Mort m~ than 1:30pm round 1t_ya1. Next tlmayou head north
any other elrline. Connetllons to Sacri'· 4.'30 pm (or south), head lort.ong Besch Airport
menlo. Or, evold !he freeway and ny,to Mon thru Thurs & Sot. by way of your !ravel agant and PSA.
Son Diego. If you live any placa IOUlh or ._..,M~.,._m_gh_t•_F_rl_&_su_n.__, PSA..,,. J'llU a llftt
Dtc0rat1now, ... PoMf11~Pt,-l'llA.
... .,,
•
I ' I • ,,
-
-
By .Phll lnterlancli
"No, dear, I'm not out with the bo)IB. I stopped off at
the tenms club tar a aet of mixed doubles.•
Young Students Blast
Environinent Polluti.:>n
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
Toni Woods Is just a third
grader, but she has some
strong dislikes about air pollu-
tion.
In a classroom assignment
on the environment s h e
crayoned a filthy sky above
sickly plants and added the
words:
"Air pollution kills plants
and flowers. It kill.!! animals
too. It kills us too. And we
hale it because air pollution
is smog and we hate smog
because It is dirty gas and
dirty air."
She closed with a promise.
"We will try to stop it."
Toni attends Ci eneg a
Elementary, where teachers
have discovered like teachers
at other schools in the city's
system that children are far
more aware of the en~
vironmental crisis than most
adults realize.
One teacher at Cienega,
Carol Olodort. explained.
"It's not out of their realm
like a lot of things we teach."
she said. "We teach history
and stuff that doesn't make
sense to them. This is
something in front of them
rather than behind."
She said her class got on
the environmental topic when
"we looked outside one day."
"The kids were coughing
and talking about how bad
the smog was and they
couldn't go outside to play,"
Miss Olodort said.
She said the class "talked
about an hour, about how
smog was killing the flowers,
about how it was hurting us."
J.'It was just a spontaneous
thing from the children," she
said, "and it brought us all
closer together."
One 8-year-old, Clarene Sul-
ton. has a plan for action.
"I'm going to form a club
to fight air pollution."
One third-grader warned:
"Air pollution means dirty
air. Air pollution is getting
us sick. lf you won't do
anything we will."
A classmate took a softer
tone when she wrote. "Fresh
air makes the whole world
wonderful."
SA VE .'f; 10 to $50!
' I
Behind-the-Ear
Hearing Aids
lleplar$llt
~~~:lllZf ............................... ~229 we:w.-............................. ~34
~:w.-............................. ~269
S4VE~ ~ 9 ~~-.............................. 28
'ii ·I VE'i&' ~:,.,. -····················-··!'299
H-AlftAIAPrbY•CU-••• ....... ., A Com-Y•CU Depm!O.. ne1nns ...-Art Aniilahk at the Folloftlic Sem1.Rllm
,__Part: f .. ew"0041 r-
CecnP'MI 1.-,Beadi s.dic..&Plm.
1' .. 0tyB1pieUSolo ......._ T~
FJM•te Mce 1lRJ.,_ VllkJ
Cltoldaki
• !r ' • Attend the Church of Your
Choice Regularly
I
'
Mond11, Marth 8, iq71 DAILY PILOT 9
New~st Elder Statesman
Winthrop Rocke£ elle1· Enjoys Roles Doctors Report Way That
Relieves Itching, Pain Ofl
Swollen Hemorrhoidal Tissues
L!TILE ROCK , Ark. (AP)
-Relaxed. rested and back
in bl! element, Winthrop
Rockefeller seema lo be en·
joying his role as the newest
ek!er statesman of Arkansas
polltia.
Tbe sUng of defeat In his
bid for a third tenn as
governor Is fading as he busies
himself In business and civic
activity which he slighted dur-
ing his six years as an active
politician, rour years a s
governor.
As always, Rockefeller Is
jnvolved in many things. Two
of ttis main activities now are
establishment of an Infantry
museum at Ft. Benning, Ga.,
and the launching cf a prlvate,
potentially profit-making land
development.
He is cochairman of the
proj-ect to set up a museum
honoring the branch of service
in which he served during
World War II.
Rockefeller said that at his
insistence the museum would
not be a mere reposJtory for
Infantry hardware but would
commemorate the in-
fantryman as a fighter for
freedom.
Asked lo cile the single ac-
complishment which gave him
the most satisfaclion while he
was governor, he said ,
"Really, !l's an Intangible First Applieationa Give Prompt, r
thlng. In four years with com· Temporary Relief in Many Cate!·
petent people we were able There's ti most effective medi· inflammation. The an1wer is
to build an ongoing program cation that in many case1 doetor·tesledPrtporationH11•
for Arkansas a program that gives prompt relief f'?r hou.rs ' There's no other hemor-• ' from such hemorrho1dal dis· rhoidal formula like Prepara~
with modifications, a SUC· com rort and actually helps tion Hand it needs no
cessor governor can latch on shrink awelli ng of hemor-prescr!ption. Ointment or,
to.'' rhoidal tissues caused by_ the _ 1uppo<.orJea.T
lie reiterated that he will
stay in Arkansas and that hel--------------------
~=~d~~af!a~;:i~~ 10
become a Kids Like to Ask Andy
It's our Anniversary.
. --
I he savings are on the house.
....
Sale$399
Reg. $457, Save $58. 3 pc. Contemporary
group includes sofa. Mrs. Chair and swivel
rocker. Features long lasting black vinyl
cover and semi-attached back and seat
cushions of wedge-shaped poly foam. The
hardwood frames are doweled. glued,
screwed and nailed lot solid support and
years of wear.
Pelm'I frhl'll a petcel IDclade -y Wfthln .... , .....
•
Contemporary Group pl.eces on sale separately:
Sola, Reg, $219------------'Sale $111
Swivel rocker. Reg. $129 Sale $115
Mrs. chair, Reg. $109 _ .Sole $95
Mr. chair, Reg. $119 Sale $105
Love seat, Reg. $159 ate $139
Ottoman, Reg. $40---· .. --···-Sale $34
Rock-A.-lounger (not s hown} Reg. $159-·---S•le $131
..
Value. It still means something at Penneys.
._. I
Use Penntys Tim! P•ymenl Plan. FASHION ISLAND, Newport Center, HUNTINGTON CENTER . Huntington Beac~. Shop Sund.y, too, 12 lo S p.m.
•
'
I
•
I
!
• '
-•
•O v..ilV PILOT Monday, March !, 1'71
Winnie Judd About to Win
Freedom After 4 Decades
PHOENIX CUP!) -Nearly
40 years after ahe was
sentenced to hang, legal
freedom ls ne11r for \Vinnie
Ruth Judd, the ' • T i g e r
Woman" or the sensational
trunk murders or another era.
Mrs. Judd. 66, is awaiting
Gov. J ack \Vllliams' decision
on whether to commute her
sentence to time served, as
recommended by the slate
parole board.
In 1931 she was convicted
after the killing of two fri ends
whose bodies were found in
trunks at the Los Angeles
railway station.
Since then, she has spent
29\~ years ln a mental
hospital, nearly seven years
as a fugitive after escaping
from authorities and three
years in priS()O.
If she is granted the com.
mutation. it will mark her
third key success in her legal
fi ght for freedom .
Her first victory came April
24, 1933, when a jury at
Florence, Ariz.. site Df the
stale prison. declared her in-
sane, preventing her from
being hanged or kept in the
prison. She had gained the
sani ty hearing only 72 hours
before she was to die.
Then, in 1952 Gov. Howard
Pyle commuted the still pen-
ding death sentence to life
imprisonment. The act Ion
came aft er 1'1rs. Judd was
returned to the hospital follow·
ing her si~th brief escape.
She said she kept leaving
because she believed in her
sanity and feared the death
penalty would be imposed.
For 10 years following that
commutation. J\1 rs. Judd made
no attempts to leave the
hospital. Then, on Oct. 8, 1962,
•she walked out an unlocked
door and disappeared.
Only a fluke Jed to her
recapture in June of 1969 at
Danville, Calif., where she
worked as a housekeeper
11-In. Portable Color TV
under the name Marian Lane.
Sherlff'15 deputies learned
her klenUty wblle cbecklng a
car registered to bet that had
been sttn near the home of
a murder vicUm.
After her arrest, Mrs. Judd
fought extradition, but
California Gov. Ron a 1 d
Reagan ordered her sent back
to Arlzona.
Soon after her return to
the state hospital, Mrs. Judd
was declared sane by doctors.
and on Aug. 29, 1969, she
went to the prison she had
not seen since 1933.
In the fall of 1969, Mrs.
Judd asked the state board
of pardons and paroles for
a commutation, but, in a split
2-1 decision, the boaid denied
the request.
Last Feb. 23, after a new
request from Mn. Judd, the
board recommended she be
paroled. But the final decision
is up to the governor who
said he would make a
1930'1 KILLER
Winnie Ruth Judd
thorough study before ruling.
Winnie Ruth Judd's name
was ftrSt headlined across the
nation in October of 1931 when
police discovered the bodies,
one of them dismembered, of
Agnes Ann Leroi and Hedvig
Samuelson, 1n two trunks at
the Los Angeles railway sta·
lion. Police opened the trunks
aft.er a baggage man saw
blood seeping from one of
them.
Pussycat Theater Executive
'
Turns to Legitimate Stage
SAN DIEGO (AP) -Vin.
ctnl Miranda, alter parlaying
ttal ••lale deals and bis chaJn
of l'uaaycat movie bou3es and
racy fllml into an itt·mlllion
fortune, is venturing into
legitimate theater.
He said he's been stage-
struck for most of his 37 years
and expected to Jose money.
"Slnce I was a kid, I've
wanted to have a legitimate
theater and now the cor·
poratlon can afford it," he
says.
The first curtain got!s up
March 16 on bis new Qff.
Broadway, restoring the o1d
Lyceum Theater which opened
in 1904 with dramas and
musical comedies only to be
overrun by burlesque.
Dorothy Lamour is ~hedul·
ed for Ether' Merman's role
In the veteran musical.
"Anything Goes." A four.week
run will be followed by
another show openlng in April.
In a aordid·looklllg block of
bars and pawn sbope, Miranda from Loo Angelea and New
haa aunt about $250,000 ao York City for the lint show.
far. "Plaza SuJte, .. starring
'IblCk carpets, red velvet D _. _,,_ 1~ t the curtains and plush seats tn a ana ~~ws, Q nex ' Y
"turn of lhe century" style say;
have replaced the rundown "We'll nm the aamut from
burlesque house that catered light to beavy,'1ay1 Miranda,
to passing sailors on F Street, who alao hopes to aee aome
actually two bloclu o ff children's shows produced ln
Broadway. the lbealer to "help build the
The opening-night seats will future audlenoes."
go for $10 but slacken oair=:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;:::;;;===:;:::;;;:::;;;=;::=:;::;:=:===
thereafter to a $6.SO top on
weekends and $5.Sll week
nights. A few balcony seats
remain, but the 623-seat house
is down to 425 now. To start,
six evening performances are
plalllled with valet parking
provkied.
The managing director is
Jack Ragozy, a veteran of
some 30 years in professional
theater. G. Tate, real estate
manager in Miranda's Walnut
Properties of Los Angeles, is
prOOucer.
They expect a cast of 30
Come to thla Chrllllan Science Lecture
b,
GRACE BEMIS CURTIS •• Fl,_ C•1rdl ef Cltrflt, Sc_..t,
JJOJ YI• LU., N.wpett IHdl
I P.M. n..nctoy, M.,P 11
Regn! ..
'199.88
Prices Effective
Beginning
SAVE';I. Sq. Yd.!
Indoor-Outdoor "Something Wonderful" Carpet
•Use indoors and outdoors f'rom patio to den,
won't shrink or mildew
ResuJu •S.99 Sq. Yd.
March
7
•Easy to maintain, most spots and spills wipe
right up 99
J l·jn. diagonal measure picture. Automatic
c hroma control, keyed automatic gain control,
built·in color purifier.
UaeYour
Sean Revolving
Credi! Chorge
•Available in 10 up to date colors
$6.99 sq. yd. "SometbingWonderrul,.Vinyl .•• 5,99
Installation Availal>U
Men's, Women's Fashion Watches
Choo&e trom a wide selettiDn or men's and women's
fashion watches in a variecy or popular 1tyles. Hurry
to 1Jee these great buys!
Cantrece® Il Panty Bose
4pr~5 Regnlu 'l.69 pr.
SAJIE 260/o!
Sheer leg with opaque panty, nude heel.and rei.Df'orced
toe..Sprin( ahadea in Petite, Average or Tal1.
lltJ. ut All nade Contreet'A D pantyhose ........... 1.09
l"'s ears I IUI: ....... K , •• ~ •• 2 ... llO IL MONTI GI i.,,,,,
CANOOA PAIK J40.0U1 CIUNIAU QI 1•1004, Cl 4-4111
..,, COMP7,ot! HI ,.2s11, NI 2-11•1 ffOUYWOOD ~o f ·Jf41
,!.US,lOIJIUCK.ANDCO. COVINA ttt-0611 IHOUWOOO 01 1•21::11
Polyester, Cotton Underwear
6 fo~5 .
R.,.W. S for '2.98
SAJIE 17%!
Long wearing polyester and cotton underwear. Choose
sleeveless undershirts, T:shirts, briefs or boxers in
men's sizes. Stock up at this price!
..
Infants' Nursery Needs
Your Choir.,. }77
• Infant Boys' or Girls' Bootie Seta ................ L71Set
• $2.99 Printed Crib Blantet .. ~ .................... L77 Ea.
• $2.29 Blrdteye Djapers ............................ LTt
•Pkg. of3 for$2.591nfan1Shirll ................. 3/L77
• 3 for $1.29 WaterprooCPants ................... 8/1 '17
• $1.09 Filled Crib Sbeet .......................... 2/L'7 -
lONO II.ACM Hl .S-0111 POMONA HA f·S161 IOtrnl COAl1' f'lAlA •40'4UJ
THOUSAND OAQ Ct7-411t
TOl!.t'NCI 142•1111
OlYMC & 101'0 AM 14211
OIANIH '11·1100
PAIADl'NA 111·1111, :IS1-421t
PICO WI to4162
Shop Nights Monday through Saturday·t :30 A.M. to 9:30 P.M., Sunday 12 Noon to 5 P.M. 115c.th.tattlon Guaranteed or Your Money lock"
IAHl'A ANA Kl 7-3171
SAH1'A n ll'llNGI 944°1011
•NT.A MONICA IX 4°1711
VAWY PO a0Mf1, tM-2120
mMONf n t •1t1t
• \ \
'
•
' r'
. "
•
OAILY PILOT
THIS IS NEWPORT'S PRO.BL
.. -
.
0 TRAFF IC JAM LO OKIN G EAST ON COAS T HIGHWAY FROM DOVER DR IVE -FRIDA Y, FEBRUAR Y 26, 19 71, 4 p.m.
L e problem is traffic. Too much of it.
v.rill get worse, not better, in the years ahead.
And it
\Ve don't need statistics to tell us that. \Ve're all
part of it every day. In the morning and late afternoon
rush ·hourS. On the we!kends. Summe r weekends
especially.
It's because Newport Beach is an attractive coastal
r,c~eation town,. as \VelJ as a place to live in and work
in -and a place to drive through.
So that's the problem. Traffic.
How do \ve solve it7
\Ve solve it lhrou~h our local ~overnmenl. It be·
gins there, with the people we elect lo our City _Coun;
cil. They have the means. the authority. the determina-
tion . and our mandate. to do the iob.
TheY-'ve ~otten the messa~e. Loud and clear. A
Coast Freeway that would damage our harbor environ·
..inent isn't wanl<d_ by..tbe -J>OOple of Newport Beach. J
They got that mesiage long ago. It Gas been, and is.
their mess.ace.
•
I
A freeway along the coa stline, our councilmen say.
ls not only unwanted (no agreements have heen signed
for the shoreline·hugi:'ing route \vest or the ba y) -
it may al so be unneeded despite the traffic.
That's \\·hy our councilmen are com1nitted lo ;1 n
in-depth . wide-ranging investigation of Ne\vport's traf-
fic problems and needs, present and future.
Newport has never had such a study before. It "'ill
produce some options for the city. It will show different
\Vays the city could Cop~ wilh its own traffic and the
traffic that pours into and throu~h Nc,vpo rt from all
over, cloeging our streets. It \\"ill sho\v ho\v this could
be done \vithout a freeway along the bluffs.
It will sho\\' whaL changes in our exi&ting street
patterns would be needed to make th is possible.
\Ve will know then \\"hat our choices are.
\Ve don 't know now.
\Vhen we dq know JY hal our choices are, we can
......-throuah our elected representatives -take action ~
and make demands of. the..state's freeway builders on
the basis of sound knowledre .
,
So when we go to the polls on March 9, let's keep
the problem in mind It is traffic. It isn't our local
government.
.<\net \re can't solve the problem by attempting to
lie the hands or the people \\'ho can do sotnething abou t
ii: our elected representatives. They n1ust retain the
responsibility lo study the problem and to take action
on our behalf.
\
..... ~ tide of emotionalism cannot"'~\veep _our streets
free of traffic. It can only \vorsen it.
Vote responsibly on ~larch 9. Vote for rcpresen·
lat1ve government ..
BY VOTING NO ON
PR 0 P 0 SI Tl 0 NS.
BOTH
COMMITTEE FOR A RESPONSIBLE VOTE
ON MARCH 9th
J. l•~I 11.tllflSM, C.1!1lrm111, JH (1.,. .. Mlfl!lll.1• Orl't't, C.t,..111 Ill Mtrt
IM•-Mtn~•lll °""' .. c. Jlm,_1 Chl•lft lit. c-,., Ill. w. L"'""' •kM,.
li.•et1U J1111u •. tlMll•"'• Dff Cttjll Jtltll ... \llMrll J ....... ,,n.,.,, JllNI
•'"1llt11it.I Of, 11111 Mn. LlfU w. H .. lfttr. ,-J
•
•
• . '
J Z DAILY PILOT
Fair Group Seeks
Equestrian Boost
The S2nd Di s tri c t
Agricultural Association 'A'ants
to see more horsing around
at the Orange County
Fairgrounds.
New progra1ns to encourage
equestrian activities are rlO\'I
in the works. follotA'ing a
series of talks by the Fair
Board and Orange Coast horse
enthusiasts.
Rental fees for stabling and
other facilities will go up June
1 to help finan~ a number
of improvements. according to
Death J\'otiees
Al U.M
C"-t!" JIJl'ltl All•"· Ul I v 1111 Ddvt .
N..,.oor1 BeK h. OIJ• of oe1111, M<1 rc11 1.
!.urYlvt<d tw sll11r. Mro. M•v Sompi.on,
,.,..,._, lttdi. S..-.kn WlodMMll¥. II
ANt. 51. Jlmft Epl!IC-1 Cllurcll. Ft,...
11¥ IUllH" l""M w111.r ... ro ,.. ........
i.-111 cantrlb•lllorll, pttlH contrlb•Ht
to the A~111 C111cer Socle!y, fie!!
lrotdWIV M«nit•'I" Olrtelorl.
ALYAllll
Pear a E. Alv1r1r. "'" 1J, al 1I02 GI •·
t!.rd, HuntlntJort a.1c11. Dt lt ol ci.1111,
Mirt h S. Surv!vt<d bV wilt, C1rmtn: '°"'• VIC!.,.., St1¥1e. Jo-, Tim, Ruben, An<lv. Fllldv. Ju1f1n Alv1r111 d1u1h1tr1,
Lind• E11>1!1t t nd E1!Mr Oor1m1; )t
ti•tnach!ldrt n, ' t•NI -ertnOClllldrtn.
Re»,•rv, tonltht, Monatv. 7:JO PM. s ... 11111 Cht..el. ltt oultm M111, lueld1v. t AM. SS Simon & Judt Ctmolk Church.
lntermt'fll, Good 511•11f1••11 CMitltrv.
~mllh• MOtlUl'Y· OlrKIO<"I. •••w••
Fairgrounds General Manager
Jim Porterfield.
1be average horseman will
pay $10 to $15 more per
month. while primary lessee
Katrina Lantz's cost for use
or Barn M on the grounds
goes tup $115 per month.
She is one of six person.!!
renting such a barn or a
portion of one with whom
agreement 'A'as r e a c h e d
recently. invo l ving an
addil.ional $25 monthly rent
for tack and feed room use.
The Mesa Boots and Saddles
Club which has maintained
Arena Two -scheduled for
grading and d r ainage
improvement has
maintained it for y e a r .!I
without subsequent re n t a I
charges.
Their scheduled junior horse
shows are designated as non·
profit training sessions under
the new increased rental
schedule.
Some equestrian g r o u p s
questioned whether it would
be fair to raise the rate.!!
June· 1 if new improvements •
haven't been completed .
Po rt erf ield said the
improvements will be done.
"The Fair intends to spend
more on improvements than
additional rents will bring in,''
he added.
-'r • • .,. •
Health Fair Record Year Seen
SANTA ANA -Plans for parents 'A'ill develop interest heart rate on a treadmill and and the chance to actually on the use o( medicines In
an expanded Orange County in guiding their children to apply plaster casts to dummy insert sutures using specially Space \\'ill also be part oC
llealth Fair that Is e1pected careers in the field of health." arms and feet. treated pig skin. the two-day program.
to top its 1970 attendance Special exhibits lined up by Other medical exhibits In-Co s t a Mes a po 1 i ce Mrs. Philip Winsor o f
record of 40.000 visitors have the '"omen's auxiliary for the elude "Mr. Disaster," a department's helicopter will Newport Beach. president of
been armounced by the Orange two-day sy mposium include specially constructed manne-be used in a simulated r~scue the OCMA women's auxiliary.
County Medical Association's booth.!! where students and quin who can '0bleed" profuse-mission , county fl re said exhibits will be open April
women's auxiliary. pa rents can learn to cive in· ly at the touch of a button. departments will demonstrate 24 from noon 'to 8 p.m. and
Sa nta Ana Junior College jections using an orange, test the opportunity lo use a dental rescue procedures and NASA from noon to 5 p.m. the follow-
will again be the selling April their physica l condition and drill on an extracted tooth films showing recent advances ing day . 24 and 25 for a symposium,1---.:....:'----------'-----------'------''--------.::..._: _______ _
Brea Missile
Site Na1ned
111 Shutdown
BREA -One Nike-Hercules
missile 1ite among 38 schedul·
ed for shutdown by the U.S.
Army Air De fense Command
is a facility in Brea, leaving
only one in Orange County.
specifically d e s i g n e d to
answer the questions of senior
school students and carrying
as its theme: "Health Careers
Plant New Hope for
Ecology."
Dr. Fred Kay, OCMA presi-
dent, said the 1971 exhibition
··~'ill ran ge all the way from
outer space to inner space
with a special re gard for
world humanity in between.
"This Is a family type of
Health Fair and we hope that
SA Bar Pciir
Face Trial The anti-aircraft unit to re·
n1ain among 52 still ln service
as part of America's defense
system is in Garden Grove. SANTA ANA -Nu.die bar
Authorities announced the operator Harry Maselli and
closures froin headquarters in one of the allesedly overex-
Colorado Springs Wednesday, posed entertainers at the
saying it will save taxpayers Tomcat bar have been ordered
$31 million annually beginning to face trial April 19 in Orange
this July. County Superior Court on
charges of exhibiting obscene The Nike base operated by material. encouraging lewd
C Battery, 251 st Arl.illery Bat-conduct and conspiracy.
talion in Brea is the only Maselli, 38. and Naomi
Southland site to be closed Frances. Sims, 28, Sanla Ana.
by the new order, with June also were ordered by Judge
J the shutdown date. Byron K. McMillan to return
You Work Less
You Save Money
Keeps things cleaner without
effort, eliminates bath tub rings
Soap and clothing last longer
Dbbes
Sparkle
Genlle lo
Baby's Skia
Feel Frnll
ad Dea•
Ask Abo ut Sears Convenient Credit Plans
Complete In stallation Available! Just Ask!
I Sears I
13411 ........ ~""'°""'
So'. Coast Plaza 3333 Bristol St. Ph. 540-3333
Buena Park 8150 La Palma Ave. Ph. 8211-4400
Santa Ana 1716 So. Main St. Ph. 547-3371
Htrrie!I M ll•twt • . .flte 41 of 1110 W.
Ocetntronr. NewPOrt ll•tCll. Otte of
ou tn, M1rd'I •· S...-..NH bv Ptrtnti,
Mr. Ind M<I. H1roldl fltt....,, Vlllt Ptrl<r
1111""· l•rnJct Sutlle•llnll 1nd c11n,.,.n
C"rtfl: bell trltlld ,"ll•Kll" £11111•11, al
Int llomt. N11lvt o1 Fuli.rtor.. Ct lll r
ll11ldlnl of N-part llNCll far 111 vtttt;
tlttndtd O<tnp Hltll Sc;-Ind $ ... II
AM Junior Colleff. St,.,.k e1, Tueld•••
J:» PM, W•v•rlJ' cnvrch wit~ Rev.
Ht•"' £. Owlntl offidll1119. tnterrn.,.,r,
F1Jr111v.., M""'°rl•I Ptrll. Ftmllr tw-
ftl!I ll'iolt wlll'llM Ill ""ltt '"""'°tltl
c°"'lrlt>utlono, al••w <onlrlbult 111 "''
j()(9I CU11tt r Soc1f1Y. $"'11111 1nd TVllllll
Morru1rv. Dlrecltl,..
Yacht Group
Files Suit
On 'Bounty'
Designed 1o knock out in-to his courtroom April 2 for
coming enemy bombers, the a hearing on a motion to
Nike has been p a r t i a 11 Y suppress evidence.
rendered obsolete b y in· --'-'----------'------------------------------------------------
novations in both attack and
l11EAlll ll1vm~lld 0. l'.:n Eu•. S.rvlct1 -ln1 II
McCormick Mortulrv.
IOW.flllDS
Ht •rv M Edw•rd•. IOoll El Ctm!na Dr.,
C0111 Mfil. D1t1 of ,,..th, Mtrcll I.
Su,vlv111 or wllo. M1rlon; tllrH lllftl,
O.vld, of S1ntt Ant; J1mt1 11111 Pllltlp,
boll\ of Co•I• Mt1i1 IWO 1l1!1r1, Ml"I.
G&rtruat 1-loblon •1111 Ml"I. Audrt'I' SonlnJ
bro111~r. Fr1nll ldw1rd1, 111 of lll'IOllt
l•ltnd; 1nd thrff 11ru10c:l'llldr..,. ll1111rv,
IMillh!. MDNl•v, 1:30 PM, lteciu!ttn
t.\IH, T111tSd1v, 10 AM, bolh 11 $1. John
flit 11101!1! C1111olk Church. ln1trmtnl.
Good S11t1>nt•ll C..m111,.,, a1111 C01t1
Mt11 Mortu1"' Olrt<:IO<"I.
HAlL
defense systems.
No weakening of American
ability to thwart Soviet or
other possible enemy strikes
will result. military leaders
emphasized.
Students
Get Grant Annur P . H111, Btlovtd llutbtnd al
9,..,.1 F. Htlh l""'IM lllller ol M<1.
M1rv E!tl11n £1Hn . .flho ... rvlvld bY
1110"°" Cllllard K•ef>lt r; lhrtt ••-·
clllldrt n •nd """ ••Nl .. rt ncldllld. Se•V·
lcn Tut!..UY, 7 PM. Clltt>el ol Cunn!nt·
htlTI t nd O'Connar. 150 w. W11hl..,tot1
lllVd., l OI """lei.
SANTA ANA -Two forme r
principals in "The Bounty,"
a Harbor Area publication
aimed at the boating fraterni-
ty, have been sued for $2'70,000
by the American Yachting
Association of Newport Beach
in an Orange C.Ounty Superior
Court action charging them
with breach of contract and unfair competition. IRVINE -About $82,602 Is
Association officials claim being earmarked at UC Irvine
that Lee Ann Sulzman and lo encourage more qualified
Sam Stinson are seeking to minority studeRts to seek
MUDSON
Nor• E. -..... Otte "' oe1111. Mt •Cll I
F...,.ral 1ervlct1 1nd fnter,,..nt win bt
f>eld l~ Twin F1111. Id•""· a11u Ca1t1 Iii••• MOrt,,.rv. fnrw1rlllnt ll!reclO<"I.
I · I bl . r graduate degrees. circu ate a nva pu ica ton Dr. Keith Justice, dean of
llOHAllD
,.,,.,, .. M -\.t-•11. At• 11 ol HO $ht ••
,,.-Pl1ct, C"'tt Miii. Otlt Of dell"· tit •<ll I. SunrJwtd by ~lllblnd, llk P,erd
E. l ectn•rd: llOtl it k lll•d I'.:. ol COit•
M111: two cl1u111te<"1, """"'"" 1nd J1c-
11111lyn l_..rdr two "'1>111tr1, Arrn1nd
l!nd P1!•kk Mllllltr; ltlrtt 1l•l1tt1.
Cl1lrt Phorltv. M1rit McCtnr•• and
J1<11uelv~ It"'•· ROii"'• l ut$41Y. I PM, ~t!! lroldwt~ Cll•ML Rtoultm M111,
Wltllnt 1d1v. 10 AM. 11 51. Joetll!ml
C1tn.ollc Church. lltll fl•oHwtl' Mor-
l u1rv, Ol•Ktor•.
of the same name in defiance of the contract drawn up !he graduate division. said the
between the parlie's Oct. 2.1. funds will be used to provide
1970. when AVA, 3700 Newport 26 part-time jobs for research
Blvd., purchased the publica· assistants and t e a c b i n g tion. assilltants, starting this fall .
Judge Robert Banyard has The Irvine campus Is
granted the AVA request for currently a cce plln g
a restraining order against applications for g r a d u a t e
Miss Sulzman and Stinson and ,,.iischiiOooiilii.iiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiiOiil scheduled a hearing for Marchll
11. MITCHl!ll
Su1•nnr It. Mltclle11. 'J.«MI Mtl1•1 Orlve,
O.n1 P<lln!. Ol!t of dNtll, M1rcll ~.
Survlv«I tlJ llu1t11no. Artllu•; !WO .on1,
Artti•or Jr. Hid Mlte1 J. Mltcllell; 11o!1r,
P81rlcl1 Ann G11uel!1, Covin•: ~rtn!1,
.
Hinshaw Quits
Two Positions M•. '"" Mr•. Cl11rltl H. w. Wiiton, LI•
uuna l!lt•<h. Str'llc11 w1rt lltld S-111•·
dtY, P1dt lc Vltw (ft .. >•I. ln~rme~T.
Ptclllc VI-Mt'IT'IO'lll P1r-. Ftml!v ,.,~~·~'• '"°" w1.,,1nt 10 m•~• mem,,,.111 SANTA ANA -County
rc;i1tl1><1Hon1. p1111e tll'll•lbule "' Sol/Ill And H h COP•• com""'""" Ho1pn11, Public "•'•· Assessor rew J . ins aw ''°"' 081 .. Soutn L1 .... n1. P1c111c v1"" has resigned from posts on
Monu1rv. o1rec1o~ST t1•iO working county com,
Les1;e J. Post. "" .o, of 111.tl w. ce... mittees -legislative planning
, .. , !>t.. Coll• Mcu . O.lt ol oet!ll, d d I · ,.1,,,11 s. survlYH bv -· Leitn••d ,,.,.,. an inter epartmenta review.
P rlvll• H r'llCt • we•• ht ld •I Btll Hinshaw said the resignation ..,,.otw ... ""°';~.,.17H,,..1T1 of Gary Cottrell, his assistant :
E1v1•• s111"""'1t ..,,, u o1 1060 Prrsi· chief deputy, to become assi s·1
"""' P••c•. cosr• M11•. 511"'1"'" bv tant assessor of Riverside fltuolrte,, M". M•tlOl'I Krl1ht' Pdv•ff ,~1,.. w••• t111<1 "' a111 1 r ... dw1r County, had saddled him \Yi th
Mo<iut •Y· str:ttEllH additional duties and he could
,,.,,," .... s1e11ern "'"' 14, or 1u I'.:. '°'" not afford to time r equired
s1 • Co11t M•... 0 •1• 01 dt•!h, M••"' 1 by the committees Survlv.O tw two •onl. Gin-, ol .ldl•dtnt . ·
Jotl1' "' wvoml,..,: !lvt ort ndcllltd•en 1--ReQultm M"'• ,TUt ld•Y, 10 A.M. SI
JOIC"lml (1ll10llr Cll~rrh 11'•t•m•M
Ft Ra<t cr•n• Nttlon•I Ct mtlt'Y Bell
a roadWll' Morlu~rv, Olr..,10•1 I
Y.flRICK
kUll .... n M. Y1rlck. "'o' n, al l')llO"
Sa. Co••f Mlo11 .. 1v. r.otllll l ttune OUt ~ dttltl. M1rcll S. ~u•vlvtd bV llu!l>1nd.
F io'fll; thrH ••1M•on1, F•lhtr l t w·
feflCt KollM!tt , o! Mt •I• R"lnt P1rl1ll,
G•rd.,.,1: A.nt11onv Kolbo"ro, Or1n1t:
J tine-t 1(0111.,9. Lt aunt Hlll.: 11• ort tl·
••tndclllhlft'fl. I Cl'l•tV. IOl'lltM. MOnd•v,
7:IO PM. R"11ll"TI M1H. l ut1d1y, ' A.M,
both 11 51. C1t~t!"" of Slt nnf Ci!llo!lc ~llurdl, L"u"" ltlch ln!er,.,ent, Ht>IV
!!..,.,lc!Wf Ctmt!t..... McCor-mid Mc•IU·
•rl'• OlrKIOO
ARBUCKLE & SON
WESTCtlFF rt10RTUARY
427 E. lith St. Costa ~lesa
.. ""81 • BALTZ l\IORTUARIES
CGrona del l\lar . OR l-'4511
'tottll Me1a . . . ftfl. '"14tt • BELL BROADWA V
l\IORTUARV
110 Broad"·ay, Costa l\-lesa
I.I 1-3133
' .
McCORMICK LAGUNA
BEACH MORTUARY
1795 Lapna Cuyon Rod.
4M-M15 • PACIFIC VIEW
MEMORIAL PARK
Cemetery l\lortuary
Cbap<I
UGI Padnr Vk:w Drive
Ntwporl Beacll , Callfornl•
114-1'1• • PEEK FAMILY
COLONIAL F'IJNEllAL
HOME ,
7111 BolA Ave.
Wt1lmlD1ler 19J.3W • SlUTIIS' M RTIJARY
'17 Mila St.
lluntlngion Buclf -
pollution
is also a
state of
mind.
We hear a lot abQut
pollution of air and waler .
But what about mental
pollution? Could it affect
. the environment we
live in?
Perhaps the answer to
dirty rivers and smoggy
air is purer thinking .,.
more spiritual thinking
that eliminates the greed
and self-will that cloud
our thoughts.
To learn more aboul
tlghting mental pollution,
come hear a talk by
Grace Bemis Curtis, a
teacher and pra ctitioner
of Christian Science.
called "Lei's.Choose
Heaven Here."
aTistlan ScEoce lecture
flrtt Cll•r•• ef Cllrl1f, k l•11tl1f
JJDJ YI• Ude, N•wport leacll
I P.M, fll•ndey, M•tc.frl 11
,
I NEED
ROOFING WORK !
Me •nd my I 0 expert
roofer' •nd our S t rue.ks
ne•d work immedi.afflly.
If your roof needs
.attention, call me •t
once. I c.e n save you
con1ider.abe money in
rep.airin9 end coating.
Jui+ telephone
6_.S-1691 e nd get
the be1t roofing
offer in m.iny ye•rs.
We •re •ut horized
•pp1ic•tors of
Sno-hide Roof Shiflld .
PHONE NOW!
SAVE NOW!
We h•v• besn building
ind roofin g eiperts
' .for over 25 ye11 rs. We
don't sit around. We
went to 9et up on your
roof, 1eve you .t lot of
money, 9ive you eipert
rep1irin9. end keep our
men end true.ks bu1y.
Th enk you for telephonin9
645-1691
··WE·NEDA
ROOFING
In Orani.::r ('ni.1n 1y Siner 1946
1700 SUP!llllOR
Newport l••th, C1llfor"l1
Electricity is vital to your way of life.
So is a healthy environment.
We're working to bring you both.
It's getting a new use and a new look in more communities everyyear:
Land for Edison high-voltage
transmission lines is also
being put to use for such
diverse purposes as vineyards.
pastures, truck fanning,
growing Christmas trees and
raising ducks.
'These strips of land are called
Edison rights-of-way. They are
also used by many citi es for
public park and other purposes,
including picnic grounds,
greenbelts, hiking paths and
eq uestrian trails.
~ ~ • I ;::.. ~
l J
I
,
£...
I il1 . '
• JI . ~ it-.
.·1
I)
I,
\
The City of Monterey Park
named a parcel "Edison Trails
Park," and has added a
winding, slightly graded,
hiking path.designed for people
with cardiac difficulties.
In Rosemead, a mini-park
that has become popular with
senior citizens occupies a
po1tion of an Edison
right-of-way.
Oth er cities using Edison
rights-of-way include
Anaheim, Bellfl ower, Buena
Park, Cerritos, Downey,
Fountain Valley, Huntington
Beach, Lakewood, La Palma,
Long Beach, Montebello,
Norco, Redondo Beach, Santa
Fe Springs, Seal Beach,
Stanton and Westminster.
~This is one of the many ways
~son is cooperating with
communities to help improve
t he environment we all share. sCE
Southern California Edison
I
DAILY PILOT l:J
Vital Statisti~s fur the Orange Coast Area Do you want to answer
your child's questions
about God?
Births ......
KOAO M•MORIAL HOll'ITAL
,..,_,., If
Mf. tftd Mr1. 0111 L. An911n, t nlt EIMlrn1n A'ffftlll Ho. N, Lom1!1, ... Mf. Ind Mr•, Gabriel J imenez, Hll 1!11ktr SlrMI, CoJlt MHI, DOY Mr. Ind M,, Oon11d M. C11tle, 1J91l J1rr-L1,,., El Toro. vlrl Mr. 11\d Mr1, LOUii E,_Lom1n, 15261 ,.,.. C:ou'J.._EI T!Pf'O. llO~ M~I \.";.t ~ttw:~\..~ AllBJ:e~:
.. • Felntf't' 11 Mr nd Mn.. 'Tlllri\4J Tr111er XII a. "•ttt. "':t'J..C!LI°'""' v1rl tNGt-::J Ml'•1 :.n.o.· Goto<1ll. 12'1"'1
tN. -..'=.1.·:~ ~~P111:rn1'h ~II (MM SlrMI, CO:'ll Mey,
Mf,, Ind· Mrt~. ""!<I!''-Mal11ner, ol314
... , l<t11!, Mnl• ....... -' Ml. l ftd MA. Thorn•• HlkfWI'. ua Miu.Ion Rold No. ,SJ, TUlllft,, bot' Mr. erd Mr1. JOl'ln W, AIOHibn,
151' H""'tl"'lon LIM Rrdonda l!leldl, t ltl
Pttlf\lary 11 Mr. and M,,, Rodne'I' WllllMril. UMH~
Hewl1nc1 Slr::k..,,'"!,':':~I c11v, DOY
Mr. 11\d Mr1. P11rk k l!lfY""• Jnl Sol.rlfl P1r1on. Stn11 AM, , rl Mr. -Mr1, JOl'ln GrlmlH, 21SI C1111rt D<lwe, eo.11 "'"'I 'Jrl Mr, Ind Mrl. Vll!l.ll RI 90h~lk1M, ~.~Pia SlrHI Ho. D, .f..0«11
Mr.,, •net Mrs. Mi r,., G. c_,.r, 10621 "''et L-, N .... POl1 l!lffCb, boV ....... ,.,u M~ I nd Mrl. MltMtl W. H1,,,.kl1K, ~ UllCI SlrMI, N-l'Ort Btldl,
Mr. Ind M,,, Z1ch1ry J, $hwn
17'.G """" Tr9t Line, Irvine, vlrl Mr. Ind Mr1. P1trkk A. Tool, 1116' DrtntJe Aw111,11._ Co.ti ~, v1r1 Mr. •ncl Mr1. otr~ G. l!lluw, 15401
A1n<I Clrcle, S1lll1 A .... -Mr. '"" Mr1. Ktftl Y. Won1, no Jotnn SlrMl.1. Casi. Me11. 1lrl .. .on..,., 11 Mr. 11\d Mr1, Wl!ll1m l tll, lOICI ~ltr f or11 Orl\1, Nt""PO'I Btldi,
Mr. and Mrs. P1l•ld L. Ll~r. '19J :,:~mint "YfllUI, FD1ml•l11 V•ll••·
Mr. Ind Mrs. Rabtrt Huem1nn, 1'361 Woodrull, 'N\llml1111rr bclw Mr. Incl Mr1. "°"''' T~111, 'lJO.llrd S!retl, HltWPOt"I 81!1C11, bow
Mr. 11\d Mr1~..tn MY111r1, '°11 lrwlne, H""' Melli "' _.., .
Mr. ind Mrs. l!l..,l1ml11 P1K1.11I, 10111 JIAICI Clrclt, F(lllH'llllll Velltv, bo1' Mr. Incl M,,, Wlllltm S1vld1n, 111 Ith SlrHI, H_, lotldl, bO'I' M•. !,.., Mn. Jdul Fr-n. nn w. tmlle. S.1111 ....... bO'I' Mr. I nd Mt'I. Dtwld Sllin""Mlo '61 c..,1., Sir"', C11!1 Mui, DOY Mr. Ind Mrl. Robtrl M1rll11 111 011 Mir, AP! F. C11tl Mesa, vlrt l'lbnl•tY 17 Mr. Ind Mi'1. Mld\HI en .... ?Ill C111r011 Drlwt, C11t• Mesa, 1lrl Mr. end Mr!. M1rt1 Grim. 1n1• ASll, HW1tlnt1 on lltlC:l'I, bO'I' Mr. Incl Mr1. Mfrk TQfr!llfl, 2110 MKI Vtrdl Or Vt, COlll Mew , 1lrl Mr. end Mrt. Don s. P11rce, 1:16 v.,,.,. "I.ct, lrvl,.., 1lrl Mr. Ind Mr1. JOllOll Solt!Mn. 11S4 11r1emer W1r. N_,t 811C11. boy Mr. Ind Mr1. Rlthlrlf Hergert, llGA
So. S1nt1 A11ll1 Arcldll , -Mr. Incl Mrl. ROlllld JttJH. 7()5 Amhtrll "ll tt1 Coalt Mtw, l lrl ,..,.....,,,
Mr. trld M ... Cr11:ft F1lconer, JU.I M~u~:• ;;,~i. 1'R Tu•rt'l!l,~1 aen. 1:1361
crom,,,.111 crl\1_,~11111,_vrr1 Mr. I nd Mr1. xobtrt f"hltllp1, 1l1t1 And1!t W1w, 5111!1 An1, bor Mr. incl M,., Frt n.k Lt11trkclll1_, 1Ul Port Alllby l'lec:t, NllW.,..I 11t1cri. 1lrl Mr. encl Mr1. J1me1 H11ll1nd, 2'!12 ".obi• l.1111, Huntl111ton l!lelth, bor .. """ ,, Mr. •ncl Mrl. Jetlrfl' Stu"", llO• H1Wft "IKt , N""'POl1 l!llKh 1lrl Mr. Incl Mr1. L1r" J , l::ot!•ntll, 2$1' W, McF1dclen. 511111 AM. 1lr! Mr. Incl Mr1. W!lll1m Lwt,,.,..,, :Im Mllbro $trH I, C"ll Mini, l ltl Mr. Incl M,,. J fllJf P. Jackson, N7 H, AMII Hll. O, Cotll Mtw, ... Mr. Ind Mr!, D1wld R. PtrtY, 2114 W. AUl"llfl NII.?, 51n!1 AM, bO'I' Mr. 11\d Mr1. PhUlo J, OtllMY,
f lt A K-l'llCt. C0tt1 Mrw,
t lrl ' ... ,..., .
Mr. 11\d Mri. Sc!IU'fltr C:. Lcwner l0.J1 C.llrl L1111 c .. 11 Mf'll , DOY Mr. :f M.t11 M;1111n Miiier, l02'1 ::;ed It! Or wt , Huftll1111ton l!lr1Cl'I,
Mt. incl Mrs. JI-E. Pllle\ 2"61
Mr. ':~ ~~~~· rr:.-:~ ~~111i!rti~I 2'9S S.n!I AM Awtnut, CDll• Mal, t lrl Mr. 1rld Mr1. J1mes l Golfot, 216'1 Hll1rl1 Circle, Hunlf11111on 8ea(:h, tlrl Mr. 1nd M,,C Rlllll11 8•uim, 2161
2nd A~r.'losif~W'.!~J11"tT'AL ,1.1 . ....,..,,. '' Mr. l nd Mrs. 91vld W, M•rch, 1611
O orltndtr;tf,~':,.,Mn•· boy,
Mr. i nd Mfl. Je<;k W, Lfmm, 25952 VII DI Horii, Miiiion v 11111, 11r1.
'"""''" 11 Mr. 1NI ,.,. Ch1rl11 A. 8111111,
"'"" 1411'1 ~M':ue:.;ir:, l!le1th, 1rr1.
Mr. 11\d Mn. A ll~n J. Wltllff, inn Bodi Blvd., HYnllnllon BtKtl. DOY.
Dissolutions
Of Marriage
PINAL Dl!CRl!ll ll!llrlll , ...... ,., 17
Sl1lkltd FlortrlCI Mtf lllCI Danell Allred, Jll'I'~ Dlt llf 1rld J""" Dtl Peder-. JlldlfY H. i nd CU"ord R. 91/1'1.tllll, SIM Ann Incl TI>om11 Pll<kll.
Roat. H~·· Ju n UICI Mel•lll W"lef Mllltr, 1rtll Allll 11\d J, Gltnn, 111 Snook, r~a $.I nd John F. Wlloan, Mwlel Ju n 1nd Clll'lltr J1rnes
H-wcull, "'AZ. 1/ICI Clt d• Eugine 8YrN, NlltY . Incl Mlthttl R. Abr1111m, G111rlel 1 n d M1r11m Ann SplklM, Oorlt 0, Jnd Fl r,,11 GordOll Aroitl-. R-II. 1NI Roberti 8, F<1110, P1lrlel1 J. Ind J,nltl I(, Cook. J1net .... Ind Lt Rew M. Olm1leld, S1nctr1 •nd Gtorl t A, Arnold, Fr1ncttu l!I, 1rld Gtortt .. C1r1v, N1ncv •NI 11tld11rd F. t;..':~· '~~~:.""~Mr;:~,:;,."w11bur c1..,.f..,. c111r1 Ellrati.Th 1rld Donlld
WIWM Rumtt'f. J11n 8. 1nd J1rnes E. G11lqw1y, llrlMifl J, Ind JYlll" D. JICOblMI, lit'Yltl A. Ind Weller M. llr_, Sii-E lllbelll Ind Aldtn Norrntfl ~IUll, Vtrt M. ~ Jlll'lfl W, ml~litr·· LM Ind 8111 lrl IC Ktlttlttn A. 11111 Hlal! b , K1v•na , Stndr1 LM 9ncl Thornll Olin Nt l-. J,.11111 L ~ Otl'Mnl F. DlmcMI. Mirr SW I~ GorOlltl Cerrtll "r_h.klllH, t-IY E lftn Ind L""'ll
~::re· ="c!..in:,:·~1.: "'· Abllon, Gi i"/' WIVM Incl Slrwn M1r1e t Uktr. l! ... 1'11 Gr1a1 tNll CNrles ttr1nk1ln ' ' . • Ind C1rol L.
ATTENTION:
INCORPORATED SMALL I USINESS & PROFESSION,\L
CORPORAT IONS wl!ll CHE CR MORE EMPLOYEES
$50,000
GROUP
TAX DEDUCTIBLE
LIFE INSURANCE
• l'OR THE EMPLOY_ER -P~IUllU i re ccmploltely T••
DedU<::!lblt. 8 "1e!Jl1 Clll lie r•
dU<::ed tor f\111'1 • mlllelllft"ll'\I
t"m Plo'fff5
• FOR THE EMPLOYEE -
Llf• 1nsur1nc1 lllM'liti 11 no
t ott (...,plorer paid premluml
1r1 free of Income ta•I
• AODITIONAL Ol'T)OHS1
1. Higl>tf' 1mounl1
2. P..-m1nt11t LI f 1 c11nlr1tl
1 .... nh c~•n -•l~I
i. Waiver cf Premium 11 111111-
IY dl11bled
•. ()wnt.V.lp Clll be IHlfntcl
tor ntatt tax p\111nlflll
f'1r MOt'I lnl1r111111111-Conltd
1nc111t1vt 1nd1111rltt. lflC,,
l'llJanllnt
ORANG! COUNTY
EMPLOYERS IENIFIT
PLANS
1457 S.p.tlor .........
Hwport hoc•, Collf. 92660
'4S-1110 -•=• A.M •• s:• ,.,M. Mlndl't 1111...,.11 FriN"t
I 1lll l'llltlc• A..,..,__.i1
Vote Yes on March 9th
STOP THE FREEWAY
We ber.eve in qhange through responsible, order-
ly process. Thafis e•ectly' whet vie are doing.
This: elec:tion wa s approved by the courts. We
must keep this fre ewa y, with its noise and polu·
tion, out of our city.
If our opponents think traffic is bad now, imagine
what ii would be with 170,000 add iti onal ca rs
brought through Newport Beach by the free way.
Our locel roa ds will not ha ndle them.
Yo"' will have to pick up the tab fo r the million
dolla rs a year in p~operty taxes lost becau se of
the lend occupied by the fre eway.
'
W. E. McNAIR, Tax p•yar
6510 W. Ocean Front, N.B.
I
I
w111, Suun L. '"" JOHClll 11.
si.o.11tr, Jill V"°""" ~nd N:chHI
'~ w un.in1, N1nq AllfW 1nc1 0.11
Franklh'! Bowles, Mlrlent S. encl J1<r1 M.
Mclemore, Dolorn Luc1111 '"° Jlmmv Cr1l9m011 G1vlt Jfll.n 11\d GoN E1wln H~_.s, Jlmll Wllll• '/W;I 11.lYtrll
Ut1m1n, Oll M <Hill Ind Fr~n'C Will.1m f111w!r, R~ll L. 11\d R~'~ t:. Ats/\l'r, N.ill~lle R i •<d Col•n•r C. Eflltrtd Fflll'lll r'!' 1' Gr~t" Toni SonYt ln<I Pat Ell!>Qn C~•mWr~ln, Tr<IOY PhYtlll •rid G1rv Lt rov Rvtn. Mtrv Collttn 1nd JewPf> Fral\Cll Wl-lt V~CI J o Anni 11111 Bernd
p111lll1>5. Jimmie 011e 1nd M1•tlt
ti:"Voek, K1ml«11 TM+m1 encl GtorO• Scan )ub.lk, C1r01 c. I r.cl RIC111ro N.
LIN·8ROOK
HARDWARE
~
-:',:::;>
..
Dwplex
ELECTRICAL OUTUT
"Sptdanilar s., .. ,,.,,,.,
• ••k•'"' p1ast1, ~•ittoc\J'" pluttr oon.
• Coniplete with K~ft.
R19. 29c 10~ ..
l•ll P•••ll
DICHONDRA SEED
-'Mof-1 Or1•11 P-~ for lffl Moftoyt"'
• "·•6% .... dldl.o..... "' ......
• l•sy to "'' s1ooi. ... -
.... $1.99
99~~c..
.. ''· '-"• FLUORESCENr TUBE
• l'T-9 .. ldet brl9ht, t<Oft91ni""I
9lciro-f .... ll9htl119.
I '"' 41" fl-f(-f ,. .. ,_ ,.. .. ,., .. nJ,U ......
~~·, ......
H_ .. An..I•
SNAIL & SLUG
PELLEJS
"Rid Y-r Yard ol 1111 C""w/1111"
• A pno,_110-I '-lo fir y•-
banlo ogalnll snall1 011d 111"1'
-aftfohu 110 orMnl•.
••1.stc 33c
~'/1 .....
~ Pint le
FOOD KEEPERS -l :
.-:-;.,,
''f• lo<k ,,.,,.,. 1111"
• u .. .,,..ko .. , ,_....,.
,1.stlc.
• 71 os. ff 'h 11•1'-'4>fthtl-n
wfth •-p-tlght H ..
••11.:itc 29C
Tow Ct.oleo l'o.
, ... ,.
MOJOR OIL
"Lln·lrool~-• of f•-,,..,.,_.,.
• Moo..,. 4uty -··· .11 ,... .. ct.
... lftlt -'"' '"""°'' .... • Cholc. •I SAi 1Q, 30 ff 40 wol9ht. ···l)< 25~.
Ilk.,, N..-cr It. t lld H1rry S.
S11wlowl!ll, Nt...:1 J, t nd MtlttMW w.
1'_.llt', MUdrH L. l llCI Robert J. N~·~rOP. wmi.,... c. -i M&r•rv
Mt rllnn, Ctrmtn A. 1nd Juan Rcibtr!(I Wlllltm$,. Su11n Joy t l'ld l90A ••1.,., G•N ar~c• end Gtorul• L" Wh ,., Ron1NI Wiiii""' •lld HelM
LOI! If 1k...,11 O•""! Hl11m1 1nO Lynettt O'Ntl , Glat l 1 H. 1nd Offlnl1 R, C1r1tr, Rl"11r11 New!1111 11'111 Gtnl .M
Boll1t'/, J..nu II. •"" K•!htrlM L.
c-. Ptlrlcle l Jlln •nd Rlcll1rd
WIUlam Jr.
Wrllll\f, SMrvl L. 11!11 l>oNlll G . Mueller, M1rnle LJm 11'111 Keno.Ill ee1w11d Ellltm Mff<ft 1
C1rr1i 1n1, Ann• M. '"'° ~nu.I A.
Come to this Christian Science Lecture
b,
GRACE BEMIS CURTIS ..
First Ct11irch of Christ, Scl•11tht,
JJOJ Ylo Lido, N•wport hoch
I P.M. Th11r1doy, Morch 11
Blrkti•nd-t••ol s. i nd Victor A. A very, LI ! G1y I nd Norm1n Di le llKkham~ ·11!1'11 '"" NelUe
o. Ros.. MlcM~ 1t11nrv" 1r.d Fr111~
Nlthol11, V icki A. ind Jolet>ll A,
Noblllll. An!t• M.r~ Ind Jolln Tllom1•
Fr1nd1, M•tv•n, Jr. ""<I Vl"lnl~
HOU•lon, OolOrH Lff 1...:1 Hutn e.
H1rber, Victor 11\d Roll
Ltmond1, ,,,.., G, ind Jl/01111 Ann !~=============================::! Boyum, OOl\nt J11n 1nd EUttrit \
Hemlln, s1Nlr1 l oulM •nd L1wreoce Goodwin
Ell1worlh
Gri;entmtJ, Jr .. \'lckv A . .not Eaw1ra
N!lhOll, J .CCIUfllN Ind IOYll S.!lt r1. Brt ndl Joyce 1nd ThtrO'I
l..KOl' " Ebeling, Joyce Sylvil Ind P1ul Anlng11y
Olttver, Sll1•on June u•d Rotierl Ct mPO, NtllCY t nd Rob9t1
$<;11\1111, P4191Y l . I nd Rld11rd (, """
Wo IOMn• , ... lltht
T • Umlt ChHMttltiff
"A Pol' for , .. ,,,. Jaltl'' • 'I' '11 ctio.,__./tchtn,
ltor1t1r, &o1wl1111, cllfld• •r l'l9ul•r 1ds1•n.
• Nlck•l·plot......_,or ,......,
of cllppl11' 011d 1nlppl11.'
< "'•· $1.49
Tow 79c Cho let
•Tio !tit for uftklh,
.... "'' .... of k~dlo .tn•r "'rfod
... hal"llll ...... ch '"""' • S.ndod ....i ,_,..,.to f111l1h •
•••· $1.1• ...... 69c • ••
..;.r
PEGBOARD HANGERS
"Ta Help Y•w Or1011b1I"
• '"' convt11l1nt .i.,.,, of 10011.
''" and pans, cl1onl11t
wt11111\1, ""·
• ,,..,,.,., • 11loco f•~ ,..,,....1n9.
Kids Like To Ask Andy
O.•lt•T•...-.•lt Closa
"OUJSIDE
HOUSI PAINJING"
Wod., Mor, 10, 7-1 """Anoh.ol'"
n..,....., Mor. 11, 7.1 P'" f1unloln YalMy
Door ~b•~•fNth-fltt
........
CLEANING POWDER
"lob 't'M Sov1 011 Tli1
flbow OrtaHI"
•Cleo"' liltc.._ tlnlu oll<ill
.... h ......... ••ftly '""',,,pot•
'"" ,...., wln4ow1, 1tc.
•1f11.can.
••t· 17c 9~ ..
• c .. ,.. y-ahoe .......
triulo1 wlttl thi• H9ht, .. ......... ,... ..
•t ... , ...................... .
.,....... , ...... let". .... ,., 49~ ..
"'•• A ci-n sw .. pl"
• ,., cloan "'P ., o qlffdc ridl
arowll<ill the ltloclt.
• L1n9°halMllolll. flrJ.t
qu11llty......_.
•••. $1.39 66c
IL• ....
SHREDDED FOAM
• far cu1hlon1, 1lt ..,,..,.,, ,.iu•w
flgt.11, •• .,. •• •tc.
• Shrodd1d whlt1 poly fo.am--
foothor ••ltht ond
wa1habl1,
l•I· 49c
29~ ~ ....
Ullllf>'
KITCHEN KNIVES
•Tip """llty 11al .... 111t .. l lllodo1
-for oil yew Plt-upL
• Tour cholco 1f --9•41
01tlllty •114 .,... .... knlv91.
•••· 1tc 10c ... ·
.........
CAllNn PULLS
• Ohl w ... t.1--1'10-,.d
•urfoc1 lft '"''"" c1pPOr ., a1-.c1i •
• 1 'f•" ,.ii--.... Nook
flt' yow Ci!ltl""""
llf. 1Sc s~ ..
LIN -BROOK HARDWARE • FOUNTAIN VALLEY
11100 <; RROOl<ltLIA<;l 1;'>no VAR[I<; "'OHTM 01 W l\RNlR) PHONl '968 j)11
'
..
.'
" .. ,,
r
'
..
.. ..
r •
• ' .. .. .. ..
..
.
k
.''
..
·.
]
,
Ag
to
al
Fa
f .,,,
in
"' Bo
•nl
I
oil
I
of
CMr~
""' ·~· ""' ...
llw " -· h " l ro.o
Pedri
ti.id,
Marci ·-· Al'ldY.
l ll'ldl
ti•lnt ·-· $m!H
·~ lnte"
~m;tt
H•rrl
~ ..
ON!t
Mr.'
l llltr
Cr1fl
OM
flulr '"m AM
l :XI
""' F1Jrl
""" fOflll
·~· Mon
......
'"' '"" "" ho!~
Cilrl
'"' fllfl• 'M" M" 'M ... Mn
"" '"' "'" ti•••
'"' "'' ·~ "' ...
M<
"" , . •• '"' IM
'" "'" "'
'" .. 1 •• " ••
•t ~ ... •• "" ,.
'" " ,.
~· " ... •• ..
" "' Fl .. " ,, .. ,,. .. .. •• "
I 4 DAIL y PILOT
FAMILY CIRCVS b" BU Keane
•·• ... ~=-1Why did you wr ite rrxx shopping list on the
bock of th e pictll'e drew for my teochor?0
New Evidence Shotvs
Leukeniia a Virus
SEAITLE (UPI) -A learn cancerous through activation
of University of Washington of leukemogenic (leukemla
medical researchers believes causing ) agent . such as a
ii may be on the track of virus, or the transfer of such
new evidence supporting the an agent .from the patient's
theory that some forms of cells to the donor cells,"
human leukemia are caused Fialkow reported.
by a virus. "That possibility . doesn 't
Their findings came in ef· mean that leukemia , .. is
forts to save the life of a contagious." he added.
16·year-old leukemia victim The doctor sail:! tf regrowth
and were reported recen1\y had been the cause of return
in the British Medical Journal, of leukemia to the girl"s bone
Lancet. by Ors. Philip J. marroY.'. the cells would con·
Fialkow and E. Donn a 11 lain the two XX female
Thomas. chromosones. But it was the
Dr. Fialkow said the patient, cells con.taining the SY male
a girl, was near death when chromosone combination in
it was decided to give her which the leukemia recurred.
the relatively new treatment The researchers said more
of bone marrow transplan-study is needed to determine
talion. The donor Y.'as her 10-the importance of genetic and
year-old brother. other factors.
The day prior to receiving Should the viral theory
bone marrow c e 11 s in· prove true. medical science
\ravenously from her brother, then would try to identify the
the girl was given a four-hour, virus or viruses and work to
whole-body dose of high· develop a vaccine.
energy radiation to kill her Dr. Fialkow is an associate
cancerous marrow cells. professor of medical genetics.
Fifly·lwo days laler. she Dr. Thomas is professor of
was well enough lo be medicine and chief of tumor
discharged from the hospital. study. They were assisted in
But afler 10 more days, doc· the project by Ors. Jean I.
tors discovered the forerun· Bryant, Paul E. Neiman and
ners of leukemic cells had Elois Giblett.
returned to lbe girl's bone;;:===================::.! marrow. She died several
weeks lat.er from an infection.
Before her death, doctors
found in a study of cells that
it was the male cells of her
brother. not her own, that
were cancerous .
"Since the brother has re-
mained without evidence of
the disease. a likely possibility
is that the donor cel!s became
TAKE T HE
NEWS QUI Z
We Dare You ...
Every Sat urday
Money.
Pronto.
Wtlen you need money,-don't waste any time
Talk to the people at Morris Plan. You can have
your money the same day your lo.an is approved.
And with your money, you'll get our Money-
Back Guarantee (ii you find you can do better,
returl'lthe money within 5 days at no cost lo you).
on approval, you can borrow from $100 to
$5,000 or more, for bill consolidation, a new
appliance or any goo'd reason.
So whatever your hurry, call your nearby Morris
Plan office lo find out what your loan will cost.
..
Morris Plan
673-3700
Newport Beach -3700 N•'lil>Ort loul1v1rd
-···
I
Don't Torn Up Nose
Fertilize r Plants Has Nice Smell
By TERRY COVILLE
Of Ille OlllY 1'1 .. 1 51111
A fertilizer factory is not
the proper place to turn up
yo ur nose when offered a guid·
ed tour.
Yo11 might expect .mounds
of horse manure. swarms of
flies and bags of chemicals
to make an unsettling af-
ternoon trlp.
But it's really q u i t e
refreshing ..
It doesn't smell.
'"\Ve don 't .use horse
manure. Jt's too salty, bad
for plants," explains Gordon
Cooper, operations manager
for the Golden West Fertilizer
Company in Huntington
Beach.
A walk past the mountains
of wood shavings, sawdust,
mushroom compost a n d
recla imed sewage, plus a few
words from Cooper make it
evident fertil~r may be the
missing link in ecology today.
It is lhe ultimate in recycling.
''Everything we use is
organic -not .inorganic,
synthetic chemicals,'' Cooper
says. "And except for sand ,
all our fertilizers are waste
products from other uses."
Wood shavings and sawdusts
are collected from various in·
dustrial uses. Mushroom com·
posts a.re brought ovel'I after
a crop of mushrooms has
grown in a nearby plant.
Sewage, of course comes from
the home -after treatment
by the sanitation district.
His point ls that organic
materials steadily feed the
land while inorganic fertilizers
feed the land quickly, but,
over a long period of time.
rob it of nutrition.
''We're the only ones using
an abundance of waste pro-
ducts,'' Cooper adds. But he
doesn't like to talk much about
ecologY,.
"It's too politica~" he aaya.
"Everybone is just talking
now."
Fertilizer is his business and
Golden West is the largest
company in Orange County.
'"We sell more yards of
fertilizer per year than anyone
else here,"
It seems the farmers must
pull tractor loads out dally.
...
·~o. Farmers use inorganic,
chemical fertilizers 90 percent
of the time ,'' Cooper replies.
Then who makes mole hills
out of those mounlains?
"Architects -and con·
tractors.''
Some of the biggest fertiliz·
ing jobs Golden West handles
include 40-slory apartment
buildings, Disneyland,
cemeleries and golf courses.
Architects of skyscrapers
often come to Golden West
for special light-weight mixes
for their 'planters, Cooper ex·
plained.
'J'!'ey have to know every
weight factor in a t a 11
building. So we mix a special
Soil \hat weighs about one--
third of normal planter soil.
Jt won't tip the buijding over."
All the plant life a t
Disneyland lhat isn't plastic,
grows out of Golden West mix·
es. ,
"We've delivered 4.S million
pounds of plan ter soil there.
and the order is still growing,"
Cooper said.
DAILY ,IL.OT SllK .,,_,,
GORDON COOP ER TOSSES SPECIAL PLANTER MIX
In Huntington Beach, the Ulti'm1te in Recycli ng
Other notable jobs include
work on the skyscrapers at
Newport Center, and golf
courses at Meadowlark (Hun-
tington Beach). Mesa ·Verde
(Costa Mesa) and Yorba Lin-
' da ..
"We also took a mushro0m
compost •to Blair High School
for their football 'field. They
must have a good team
that's expensive .sh1.ff."
It's been said that
a house is the most important investment
a man will ever make.
~'re not so sure.
Newcomers
In Sout1iland
Take Drop
LOS ANGELES (AP) -The
nwnber of new settlers in•Lotl
Angeles County between 1960
and 1970 took a blg·nose-djve,
the .Lo! Angeles ,Chamber of
Commerce '1'1:ports.
Only 256.pl persons came
into the ' county f r o m
elsewhere dqrihg, ilie IO.year
period, uie chamber · said,
compared , to 1,171.516 mi~
grants during the' preceding
JO years.
The chainber saJd its net
figures were baseJi On the 1970
population census w h i c h
showed the county w i t h
7 ,032,075 residents, an increase
of 16 percent over l~.
Seventy-four percent of lhe
10-.year population increase
came from the ·natura l
increase of births over deaths
The decade between 1960
and 1970 was the first time
since tbe turn of lhe century
lhal the county's · population
Increase due to migration has
been smaller than the increase
resulting from more births
than ·deaths,
• ' Jim Slemons Im ports, Jnc.~120-w. Warner Avenue,San1a Ana, California 92101Phone:714-546-411• •
• \
f/ •
,.
,, I
,•
•
,•
omen
BARBARA DUARTE, 494-9466
MtM1,, Maf'(~ I. lf11 • P ... II
,.
1/nishal Teeching'
Lunch Series
Makes -Sense · ,,, . '·
·,
(.<•
Civic leaders in Laguna Beach r'eturned to education in suf--~ ...
ficient number to make a kickoff luncheon at Thurston Intermediate
School a ''smashing !uccess," according to Mrs. John C. Penney.
1.frs. Penney and a com mittee of interested women decided
many Lagunans aren't a\\'are of innovative and interesting programs
under way in area schqols.
So, with an eye to shedding light on.. modern education for the
older generation, they have established a luncheon series at Thurston
with each school presenting a different program each month.
More than 40 persons attended the · first session highlighted by
discussion of the initial teaching alphabet (ill/a) program taught by
El Morro by Mrs. h1onte Kunz.
1i1rs. Penney gave a talk on the Thurston program. and diners
were treated to Ha,vaiian fare prepared by the Home Economics De-
partment and entertai9ment by the chorus.
In the spirit of teamwork, sewing class students made table·
cloths and the art class drafted menus illustrating such luncheon de-
lights as Hawaiian ham loaf, fresh peas and fresh pineapple.
Mrs. Penney, who hopes all interesied residents will attepd at
least one of the upcoming luncheons. has scheduled a program from
Laguna Beach High School for the end of this month, one from Aliso
Elementary School in April, and Top of the World in May.
L FOR LION -Kris M.offett sounds out the Initial Teaching Alpha·
bet for Mrs. :6tonte Kunz (left). kindergarten teacher at El Morro,
and Mrs. John C. Penney. The inriovative method ol teaching read·
ing was demonstrated during the.initial lunch in a series arranged
by Mrs. Penney aimed at acquainting civic leaders with teaching
progtams in Laguna Beach 'Schools.
Serving on the committee wilh 1r1rs. Penney are the Mmes. Ro~
ert J. Brotherton, James Brotzman. Aldon E. Clark, Charles McCa1la,
Robert Peacock, Ed\vard Powell. Joseph Tomehak, David Young and
Helen Van Deusen .
.
Chairman Doubles as Mom
If eight hands are better than two, Mr s.
James Agnew won't have any -trouble planning
the May Bayou Ball sp<insored by Ebell Club ol
Laguna Beach.
"I didn't expect to have t\vins when I ac-
cepted the rotating chairmanship three years
ago," the vivacious Australian-born chairman
admitted.
But, from the looks of it, 17-month·ol d
Alyssa and Carolyn and 4-year-old Jimmy have
everything under control.
Add to this assistance from co-chairmen
1'1rs. Aldon Clark and Mrs. James Townsend
and committes headed by capable Ebell mem·
bers, and~Adrienne Agnew might even find a
spare moment to R}ay-tlie piano.
"Th'e committees are all set up, and I hope
they're doing the work," she noted.
Havi ng headed the Winter Festival Artists
Ball several years ago. she didn't appear jang·
led by either the prospect of presenting the
club's major fund raising event, or the fact the
twins were systematically breaking every candle
in the candelabra.
"Actually, I was brought up in the bush.
country wi th the kangaroos, some 200 miles
from Brisbane." Adrienne continued.
herself on a small island in Australia's Great
Barrier Reef. She recalls the experience as in-
teresting, but countered with "one can get a
bit buggy on a small island."
lier next job was one of direct contrast.
With the advantage of speaking English and
Italian, she fell naturally into the position of
working as tutor for attorney Melvin Belli'!!
children in Rome where he had an office, and
going . along to such places as Dallas for the
Jack Ruby trial. ,
''He is charming, a genius and difficult."
Adrienne learned through experience. And the
position netted a bonus when she met the Bellis'
friend, James Agnew, in San· Francisco.
After her husband accepted a position with
a stock brokerage near Orange County Airport,
the family settled on a hillside in Laguna. Beach
where Jim had spent summers "in the Agnew
beaCh house-the Art Colony's oldest residence.
Does she miss her native sod?
"Well,"' she mused, "Australian girls travel
at lot, although that may be coming to an end
with government establishment of work permits.
"And, with the sprawling countryside, one
could still live in Australia and rarely see his
family. In the eight years I've been here, I've
been home twice lot extended visits."
. ,
•
She attended a one-teacher school on her
father's ranch and couldn't get' away with a
thing since the teacher lived with her family.
"Even when I was sick, I'd get my lessons," she
r emembers. ~
Later, she \Vas to staff a one-teacher school
Right now, one thing's . certain-between
telephone, twins and clubwork, she won 't have
a chance to miss Australia for at least three
months.
HELPING HANDS-Mrs. James Agnew finds
herseff in an enviablerposltlon of having plenty
ol volunteer help planning Ebell's Bayou Ball.
Giving friendly assist are Oelt to right) twins
Carolyn and Alyssa and young son Jimmy who
runs the ship while dad's at work.
--r
Wife Awakens, Finds Prince Charming a Real Sleeper ·
which studen t prepared the 'original work DEAR ANN LANDERS : My husband
is a husky, healthy 37-year-old man -
a perfect J>!lyslcal specimen. Yet we
have no' Social life , no home life and
very Jittle sex life. Why? Because he
sleeps all the time.
\Vhenever we go anyplace he asks
me to drive (even to the store) so
he can sleep. He sleeps in front of
the TV, sleeps when we go to a movie,
1sleeps during basketball games and bu
even fallen asleep playing poker. Hi.!I
Idea of a vacation Is io crawl in bed
ANN LANDERS ~ and which student copied iL
At the beginning of each semester,
I announce that any student who copies
or allows his work to be aipied will
automatically get an F. 1 then hand
out a memo so there will be no
misunderstanding. This hM virtually
eliminated cheati g in my classes. or
course a few smartles have to test
me, but they "soon discover I mean
does he sleep so much?" The answer
was, "He's probably tired." Ann, he
doesn 't lift a finger when he aimes
home from work. Any suggestions? -
MRS. RIP VAN WINKLE
and. ..11teg fo hour _ o~~ ....D.f:l\B...MRS.....RJe.;.J.o~ltelil.Yly-1.1-a-
tlmes *1Jily: horat" llesbUd prek61y W 1 nlePboffc
him up and ask him what he 'd REALLY
like &o do. If be says "altep," I give
up.
DEAR ANN LANDERS: The 1.?tter business. Prin~ this if you ~ like, but
from the mother whose son was stiling no name or city, please. -ALBERT'S ~.J!rompted me IO ~te,.~TEACUER •
I am 1 tea cher Who hu ~ad con-DEAR TEACHEJ\f Thanks ror your
slderable tlperlence with cheaters. The letttr, and for the attached memo which
cloae ~ work. U .. idl cnpt ..
1•11 aa F. Are Y'" beJas fair lo ~! '
You are cbe111D1 1k claumate who
bas NOT doae Ms work bu& ls M1e1t
be cannot do well 1t11 bis exam. A r t eoou1b to lake respoulblllty ror bbaMll.
you being fair to llim? Are you belle falr lo blat?
\'ou are cbeaunr tlle clas1mati wbo You are not ceUlnC tlle btneflt or
ba1 NOT done hla assignment bu& iJ learning nor wlll you be able to PIH
honest enoiagb to admit ff. Tiils pertoa, tile exam whlln the lime comes. Are
TO BE COPIED'
You are cbtaUn& the persoa wbo
ceple1. lf lie falls 10 do gau uslpment
be does not lear11. If he does 10t lear•
lbougb unprepared, 11 at leas& 1s111ming you beln& fair to youne.U? . ~
responslbUlty for blmself. Art: you belDg ,
fair to b.Lm? Do you feel ill at ease •.. owJ.. or
:Yew ~-'@kill .a.. clwace_..-belai-llLJJ-everybod)'~L!I good )1'ne
round out and rtetlflnl an ·F. Are -yow but you7 Write for Ann Landers' boatlet,
btln& falr to yoursell? "The Key to Popularity," enclotillc -.10.
MD10 TO TllOSE WllO your request 35 cents in coin and a
•
Three months ago at my insistence 1ystem th1& reqaltt1 more ml tllan
he had his thyroid and blood sugar most people. Add lo tbls the pes1lbUlty
checked and his heart and stomach x-Ula& ht 11 bored. Sleep cu be an ettape.
rayed, 'Vflen the doctor said, "'"'He'1 Try tbt1 t1perlmfnr tht M1t time t!te
healthy as a horse ," I asked, "Why horse falls asleep outside of bed : Wake
atudent who beliives he can c o p y I wo1ld. like lo reprint.
hdmewort and get away with it is stupid. MEi'\10 TO THOSE WHO COPY FROM OTHERS: long, self-addressed. stamped envelo_pe .
''ou are cllieaunc the peraoa who hat In care or the Di\ll.Y PILOT. ' It is easy for a teacher to disce rn ALLOW TH'E:ttrWORK ,
' ..
. I
#~• ., ••• ·-~ •• , . . . . .
• ~--J8 DAILY PILOT Monday, March 8, 1971
;. '. ' .
. .. ' ._...., --.. ~ ..
' • •
A .Effervescent Bubble Brunch Aids
Sparkling with enthusiasm are Mrs. Edward Dziura·
\viec (left) and T\1rs. Ardis Barkley. members of the
Altrusa Club of Newport Harbor. The club v.·ill spon·
so r a champagne Bubble Brunch at 11 :30 a.m. Sui1·
day, J\.1arch J4, in the Costa Mesa Country Club.
Let's Talk Girl Talk
•·SCOUTING ABOUT" is the Elghty·two girls fr om
title of a program planned Brownie troops l44 and 546,
by Girl Scout troops of Irvine Junior troop 1860 and Cadette
School in East Irvine from troop 6fi5 will participate.
7 to 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday, Chairmen for the event are
March 9, in the multipurpose t\1rs. Earl Harwell and Mrs.
room. Steven Bosbonis.
B. -D. HOWES
IS
HAVING
A •
SALE
i
B.D. HOWES and SON
flNtJtWtLtRS fOR THREE GE~tRATIO~S
NEll!'ORT BE\CH: 3411 Via Lido • 675·1i31
Philanthropies
.Proceeds will be used for the Harbor Area Boys and
Girls Clubs, Youth Employment Service, March of
Dimes and other v.•orthy causes. Ticket informatio n
may be obtained by calling Mrs. Sandy Carlson.
Double Ring Rite
Afternoon Vows Said
Reciting their wedding vows F M er-.
in the Community Congrega.
tiona l Church of Corona de!
Mar were Christine Sue Callis
and Scott Dilln1an Rhorer.
Officiating for the afternoon
double ring ceremony was the
Rt>v. Dr. Phillip Murray.
The bride. daughter of the
late Robert L. Callis and Mrs.
John King Malcomson, was
given in marriage by her step-
fat her. Parents of the
bridegroom are Mr. and Mrs
Millon Rhorer of Phoenix.
Attending the pair Wf!rt!
Miss Nancy Make\y as maid
of hooor and David Haines
(If Phoenix as best man .
Ushers were Robert and
William Callis, brothers of the
bride.
A 1968 Children's Home
Society debutanlf!, the bride
was graduated from Corona
del Mar High School and at·
tended Northern A r i z o n a
University, where she was a
member of Alpha Delta Pi .
Her husband is a graduate
MRS. SCOTT RHORER
Phoenix Home
of that univerllity and an af.
filiate of Sigma Chi.
The R.horers will make the ir
home in Phoenix.
Volunteers Programmed
Bureau Picks Leaders
Link ing people in 11ced and
nonprofit assistance agencies
is the job of the Volunteer
Bureau of \Vtst 0 range
County, which provides t h e
personnel lo staff the assorted
service groups.
During a noon luncheon
tomorrow, bure8u members
will meet in the Orange home
af Mrs. Robert Glass to honor
new officers for the coming
year.
Taking aff ice will be ,Joel
Klein, presideitl; Miss Beverly
Wtbb. vice presid~nt; Mrs.
Charles Jennette, secretary
and Mrs. William Sul.er,
trea surer.
The Volunteer Bureau ,
located in Gard!n Grove, is
entering its fourth year or
recruiting , screening and p\ac·
ing volunteers, a r r a n g i n g
eme rgency transportation
through social workers and
assisting agencies with mail·
i11g.
Visit the Elizabeth Arden Red Door
~ -'
I
I --
••. it's a beautifying experience'
~ 11
a a • [QJ [Q]'
010
-
"
Let our experts give your skin
a wonderfully refreshi ng treat·
ment ••• and a new make-up.
You 'll not only look your
be st, you'll fee l marvelou s!
Complete treatment with
makeup, 10.00.
Beauly Salon
M.inicures •Pedicures• F.ici.tls
• Elec.troly~is )
~ . ., ;
I
Your Horoscope Tomorrow
Pisces: Ref use Intimidation
TUE$DAY
MARCH 9
By SYDNEY OMARR
Astrology buff clubs are
springing up around the ooun·
try. One of the leading groups
conducts regular meetiag1 In
Los Angelts, featuring gue1I
speaker1 who relate latest fin·
dings in astrology. Surprising
to many, numerou1 prominent
business mtn attend these con-
fabs, along with c o I I e g e
stud~ts and a dmllng array
of bright, attractivt career
women .
ARIF.s (March 21·April 19):
Original ideas pay off. By
be ing inventive, you turn a
profit. Don 't be afraid to
break through to new , fertile
territory. Utilize n at u r a I
pionetr!ng qualities. Make a
mark .
TAURUS (April ~May 20 ):
Accept responsi bility. Pace
may be slow; goal , however,
is worthwhile. Stress is on
how you handle home, pro-
perty, domestic stiuations.
Aim for futu re. Realize poten·
ti al.
GEMINI (May 21.June 20):
Don't attempt to be
everywht!re al once. Avoid
scattering your forces. Ex·
change ideas with neighbors,
rtlatives. Avoid arguing over
minor matters. Plenty of fun
now if you are fl exible.
CANCER (June 21 .July 22):
Don't spend merely to impress
others. Get what yo u need.
Obtain money's wor.l.h. Insist
an quality. One who makes
many promists could come
up empty-handed. Anticipate-
act accordingly.
LEO (July 23·Aug. 22): You
find way of fulfill ing some
obligations, ambitions. Utilize
experience. Im p ~es s pro-
handicap is due to be remoy.
ed.
fe!sional superior by.polishing IF TODAY 18 YOUR
techniques. Spec i a I re\a-BlRTHDAY you are capable
tionship is cemented. You of perceiving trends. You can Jeam where you stand. To 11N1 11111 wi-0·1 1uo:M1 1or vou ProVi.de w•-• Other5 need In lllllMY I°"' love, order twine~ VIRGO (Aug. 23--Sept. 22): 114~ 01111r1'• book~t. "S~rtt Htt1ti #I
f I before they become aware M.11 •r>d w~•~·" seftd 111r111d1111 Cooperative er orls shou d be of actual requ•·eme nts. Soci'a\ .11\d "'° t•n•• io 0m1rr A1t•o1or1
advoca'ed. tt·-• one who has u s.cr1t1, 1111 DAILY PILOT, lox l2•o. • ~ J'f " A f al GrenG Clft!r1I Sl1tlorl, N1w Yorkt
a i d e d y o u i n p a s t . , -;;;';;;e;;;;;i;;;m;;;p;;;ro;;;v;;;es;;;. ;;;;;;;;" ;;;e;;;m;;;o;;;;;io;;;n;;;;;;;;";;;·;;;v;;;•;;im;;;' ";;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iiiij
Philosophical · .concepts a;elr
emphasized. Look beyond the1
immediate. Be concerned with
potential. I
LIBRA (Sept 23-0cl 22)o
Funds you look for granted
could be held up in litigation.I
Plan accordingly. New view
is essential. Highlight different
methods. Leo individual could
prove to be valuable ally.
SCORPIO (0<.:t. 23-Nov . 21):
Contractual obligations surge·
to forefront. You get nothing·
for nothing. Know this -1 share kn o wl edgt. Oblain1
cooperation of one who can
aid you r cause. Aim high _
1
stick to principles.
SAGl'M'ARJUS (Nov. 22·
Dec. 21 ): Some per son s
perform extraordinarily wtU I'
for you . Give them credit.
Extend s o c i a ! invitations.
Time to show appreci ation.
Change of pace ls beneficial.
Relax -have fun.
CAPRICORN (Dec. Z2·Jan .1 19): Money, past com-
mitments mingle. Keep guard !
up : protect yoursel f. Some are
envious. even spiteful. Don 't'
compound error. M a in t a in
balance. Dispatch tasks with !'
aplomb.
AQUARIUS (Jan. 20-Feb.
18): Lit lo~: ~o plenty af
listening, observing . Practical 1 issues dominate. Home, pro-'
perty areas demand attention.I
Do some invest igating. Write.I
com municate. Ask plenty of l
questions.
PISCES (Feb. 19 ·March
20): Relative may make
unreasonable demands. Seek
adjustment in domestic area.
But refuse to be intimidated.
Be , diplamatic. M a k e in·
telligent concessions. B u t
know when to draw line.
~!' 'ff"'11!"'" "'""t"'·-:'"""~,,,_-:. ... i 1,000'1 OF OIL PAINTINGS '
~ WHOLl:SALE WAREHOUSE f J OPEN TO THE PUILIC
j llU l.5E~:':El~A~~ ANA
: Pl>oftt l lS·«OI
CrownTng Glory
beauty salons
SHAG CUT ... SHAG PERM
The new longer.look I Beautifully
curled by our careiree perm. Complete sgss
BUDGET PERM •••.•• •lw•v• $595
(Normal Hair)
M~nTu11W1I UttrWtti.
SHAMPOO-SET
STYLE CUT
295
150
345
200
Sryl ltl price• slightly higher
SOUTH COAST PLAZA 267 E 17th ST., COSTA. Ml'SA.
Lowe• leve l-N••+ lo Se•n P1'1011e 541·'919
Phone 546·7186 Op•n Evenin91 & S1mday
Op1n Ev1nin91
W1 CARE .1bout yo~t Look your btltl
Luncheon
Speaker
Intrigues
l~.~~·~·r~•~··~·~,~··~·~·~·~·~,,~·~·~-~·~::::::i::::::i::::::i::::::i~~~~~~~~::::::i::::::ii:::::i:::::::::ii: Members won't need a sixth ll
se nse lo lure them to Mesa
J-l arhor Club's luncheon Oil ·
Thursday, March 11. in the
~lesa Verde Country Club .
Featured as speaker for the
occasion, which will get under
way a1 10:30 a.m.. is ~1rs
Beverly Del.ang, whose an·
nounced topic is ESP -
Especially for You.
Affiliated with lhe Psynetics
Foundation of Orange, Mrs.
DeLong will talk about extra·
sensory perception and explain I
how to develop it. She plans
to demonstrate her own ESP:
ability on megibe rs of lhe
luncheon aud ience.
Church Plans
Three-day Sale
A wide range or ite ms will!
be availablt when members
of SL Anne's Church, Seal
Btach. open the doors of the:
parish hall for their annual 1
rummage sale on Thursday.I
March 11 .
Co-chairmen for the sale,
which will continue through
March 13 are Mrs. Mi chael
Spisak and Mrs. Victor Virzi.
Hourli will be from 9 a.m.
to 4 p.m.
Evenings
Go Casual
The evtning cardlg11 n
typifies today's casual way
dressing for lntimale little dln-
1
ners or at·home parties.
r.1onet suggests highlighting
the look wilh a tiered tassel. I
~ ............. l
M••fl•llt•
THI: RED
BALLOON LTD.
....... --fashion school .. ,
""""'
1e ... 1rle1 K1ll•y
charin fa~hion & modeling for boy!l & i;i:irls .
clas!ir!i bti;in Ma rrh 15.
call fnr rr~rr\'n linn~
~-
tli t mo>t 1ltli-h1f111l y 1111101111
tlill•lttn'' .111rt in 1he •tlnthltt'UI
16817 Al101111uin ~t.
Ill Vll't."fU,'\ lll •t 11
{714) 846-1666
•
Warehouse SALE
SAVE UP TO sao!
PLUS ,
CALORIC"
CLEANS BOTH OVENS
AUTOMATICALLY!
The .ULTRA.CLEANS .. Pyrolytic" Self·Cleanlng sys1em of
Caloric Gas R.!in_oes cleans the Lower Broil1r/Oven and the
removabJQ sides, back:. and~bol!om panels ol !he upper oven
comple tely, thoroughly, tot1lly-1utomaUcally, In Jen lhan 2
hours, !or less tnan a nickel at ftOrmal gas rates, .
e ULTRA-RA Y e infr<11·red broiler
charbroils meets, smo~e less
e Timed cook & keep werm oven e Roti1 1erie e Automatic m1at probe e Loaded wi th extr1s
SAVE $$ ON DISCONTINUED MODELS
FLOOR SAMPLES ••• DEMOS NOW
REDUCED _ TO CLEAR!
C.t.LORIC GAS
RANGES AS LOW .t.S
$1Z995
lntegr1t11 and Dcpc11dabllit11 Since 1947
'
'
•
\
.... _ •••• 1• .... ,, •••• , •• , .... \•<1 ........ ' ~.
Pledges Exchanged
In Newport Church
Weddloj: pled&ea ond
were exchanged by
rlngs 1.ooise Towle and Dennis Dean
Rlta Blackman during afternoon
rites in St. Andrew 's
Presbyterian Church, Newport
Beach.
MRS. D. B. BLACKMAN
Senti An• Home
Reading the ceremony for
the daughter and son of Mr.
and Mrs. Richard M. Towle
of Costa Mesa and Mr. and
Mn. Bruee Blackman of San-
ta Ana was the Rev. Dr
Charles H. Dierenfield.
Mrs. Michael J. Smith was
matron of honor a n d
bridesmaids were the f\-1mes.
Roger Boyd, Michael Klima
and Michael Towle, sister-in·
Jaw of lhe bride.
Lawrence E. Blackman v.·as
his brother's best man, and
ushers were Smith, Towle and
William Matthews, cousin err
.the benedict.
The new Mrs. Blackman is
a graduate of Corona de! 1'1ar
High School and attended
Orange Coast College. Her
husband is an alumnus of
C0sta Mesa High School. They
will reside in Santa Ana.
Pair Exchanges Vows
In Methodist Church
Leading a double ring vow
exchange in the First United
Methodist Church of Costa
Mesa for ?i.1aureen Anne Okell
and James Bradley Vile was ..--·;c
the Rev. Richard J. Dunlap.
The bride was given in mar-
riage by her father for the
evening ceremony. She is the
daughter or Mr. and Mrs.
William H. Okel! of Costa
Mesa. Also from Costa Mesa
are the parents of t h e
bridegroom, Mr. and Mrs.
Judd M. Vile.
Miss Susan McLung was
maid or honor and other bridal
attendants included the Misses
Marcia ·Quackenbush, Patti
Jack and Robin Vile.
Ch.ristopher Vile stood as
best man. Ushers were Jack
McAllister, Donald Duran and
Burt Vasques.
The bride is a graduate of
Costa Mesa High School. Her
husband, who was graduated
from Orange Coast College,
attended California S l a t e
Irvine Women
Charter
The newly formed Irvine
Woman's Club will be welcom-
ed wllh a presentation of gavel
and charter when the council
o( the Orange District,
calirornia Jo'ederation 0 f
Women's Clubs meets on Fri·
day, March 12 in the Santa
Tho DAILY PILOT-
The One That Cares
MRS. JAMES VILE
Evening Rites
College at Fullerton and
presently is serving with the
h-iarine Corps.
Readied
Ana Elk's Club.
Mrs. Eugene Dopp will be
the speaker, choosing a
"surprise'"'' topic , and
members of the La Habra
Woman's Club will present ex-
cerpts (rom their forthcoming
Kiv;o Show.
Registration Is at 9 a.m.,
and the meeting will begin
at IO. Luncheon will be served
at 12:30 p.m.
.. ' ' ' '
Molldlr, Mll'Ch 8, 1971 OAJLV PILOT J7
TV Scouts Discover Credibility Gap
By ERMA BO~IBECK anlmal, I noticed ht had been
vaccinated for tetanus, lock-
jaw and hepatitis.
a load ol llwit Indian
maiden .•• "
Makes you wonder, doesn 't
It? W~ the Indians victims
of fire water? Or wa1 U aa
lneffecUve mouthwash1' Either my televlslon set Is
speaking with forked aerial
or ,the Indians weren't as
primitive as 1 have been led
AT
WIT'S
END
Later, as they staged a!p;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;0\9;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;iii;i;;;;;
dance around the campfltt,
t had the dlstlnct feellrig Peter
Gennaro had choreographed
the entire thing.
NORMA CLARK
Betrothed
to believe. ,
The other night I was
watch.Ing a saga or the Old
West in which. an Iodlan guide,
Leaping Fink, was repo-rling
to Captain Baldwin, com-
mander of Fort Sickie.
101 see many braves at this
moment on their way to Fort
Sickie," he related, spreading
his arms in a wide clrcle.
"l say we meet them in a
surprise attack at Acid Rock."
Capt. Baldwin rubbed his
hand over his brow slowly.
then said tiredly, "As you
wish, Leaping Fink. Move •m -One young brave on
I " "Gunsmoke" one night looktd 00 · . so familiar. It wasn't unlll Leaping F1nk stood erect later I realized my daughter
and lh:,ough capped te~th • had worn the same beaded
smiled, Rlg~t on, Captain. outfit and headband to school I kept tellmg myself Leap-that day \#
Ina: Fink had probably just The thing that I regret Is
been to a Jane Fonda rally, that children no longer can
but I~ lhe weeks. that follo_wed romanUciie about the Old J noticed other discrepancies. West
One night 0n1 t~e la_t~ show "~k at that," I said eic-
as ~ saw an ndtan c~ed citedly, "Can you imagine set-
beh1nd a rock stalking an ting out on a horse and Wedding
Planned
In April
Aud1'ence to Question
AAUW's Panelists
covered wagon to blaze un-
charted trails on a lonely
'strip of barren land? Only
a handful made it."
''No wonder," said my
youngest, "The wheels · are
going backwards."
The betrothal of t h e 1 r
•daug hte r, Norma Jean Cl&rk,
to Onvid G. Shorb has been
announced by Mr. and Mrs.
William E. · Cla'rk of Costa
Mesa.
An April 10 wedding date
has been selected by the pair,
who were classmates at Costa
Mesa lllgh School. Th e
ceremony will take place in
the First Baptist Chui-ch of
Costa Mesa.
' If a child fears school, what
can be done to make him
more receptive?
This question may be among
those asked during a panel
discussion sponsored by the
Newport-Costa Mesa Branch
of American Association of
University Women in a public
meeting Wednesday, March
10. at 7:45 p.m.
All interested area residents
are invited to attend the
gathering in the Pavilion of
the Newport Riviera
Townhouses.
Panel membe rs who will
field questions regarding costs
of education, grading systems,
and special programs for
gifted children wlll include Dr.
Philip Hernandez of San
Fernando Valley State College
and Mrs. -W. F. Garrett, com-
munity aide, Santa An a
Unified School and College
District.
Olhers are Jesse Berry,
trustee for the Santa Ana
district and Mrs. W. E.
Langston, trustee for the
Newport-Mesa Unified School
District.
Moderator will
Philip Petty, an
member.
be l\1rs.
AAUW
"They're not really going
backwards," I said, "It just
photographs that way on
television."
"Well, if they knew they
were making a series for
television, why didn't ttiey
stay home and live off the
residuals?''
"You don't understand ," I
explained.' patiently. "These
are only reenactments of the
hard life of the Old West."
"It cooldn't have been too
hard.'' said my daughter,
"Miss Lovable and Miss
Clairol made the trip. Get The bride·elect was
graduated from CMHS and
her f\ance. the son of Mr.
and Mrs. David L. Shorb of
Costa 1'1esa. is an army
veteran o! Korea and Viet-
nam . Double Ring Rites
Laughter
Promised
Linda Fariello Wed MARCH 'S BIRTHSTONE . e 1he +:J~ua.wia.tl.fl
Glad Tidings Assembly of
God Church, Newport Beach
Ca rtoons and books will oc-was the setting for the double
cupy the thinking <lf members ring ,ceremony linking Linda
f th Riviera Club this Diane Fariello and the Rev . 0 th. e John Alan Israelson , both of
mon : . . . Costa Mesa. Beg.Jnn1ng with an 11 .30 • The Re v Alex Hunt er a m soclal hou r on Wedncs-. · d~y~ f\1arch 10, in the Balboa directed lhe vow exchange for
Bay Club, Rivlerans will en-the daught7r of Mr. and ~1rs.
joy lunch and a humorous talk James Fariello of Grand JWtC-
by former Disney animator
"King" Saul.
Th:: Ulustrator will discuss
how cartoons are drawn and
the value or modern art
followed by a graphology lec-
ture and special demonstra~
lion of Instant handwriting
analysis •.
The Book Section will hear
a Teview on Victoria Holt's
"The Shivering Sands·• at JO
a.m. on Monday, March 15.
in the l~aguna Beach home
of Mrs. Leonard G. Davis.
Dance Club
Square Riggers S a u a r e
Dance Club "swings out"
every Wednesday at 8 p.m.
in the First P.1ethodist Church,
Cosla Mesa,
Ecology
Sets Theme
Y..frs. Robert Hayes will open
her Newport Beach home for
a 7:30 p.m. meeting of
Southern Orange C o u n t y
Alumnae of Alpha Phi
Wednesday. March 10.
A report on the group's
February lollipop sales will
be given by Mrs. James
Florance, chairman , and Mrs.
Dottie Heitz, a Woodland Hills
resident will speak on ecology. Dessert and coffee will be
served by Mrs. Ernest Koslian
and Mrs..__John Blaich, co-
hostesses. Mrs. Douglas Gor·
rie will conduct the meeting.
lion , Colo. and the son 0£ Mr.
and Mrs. K. C. Israelson of
Seattle.
Attending as maid of hooor
was MIS! Carol Fariello, the
bride's sister; bridesmaid was
Mrs. Donald Peery, and fl ower / girl was Kristine Israelson. 4fl'-. J. f tiit
the bridegroom 's niece. nt h ~ a
Jerry Watkins served as 1·1 ~ (jv
best man, while G e o r g e ttt
Israelson, the bridegroom's brother was the usher. Jackie The colo r of the AquamariDe
bu been likened to a thouaaDd Sampler was the ring bearer. learues of 11UDlit"1ea iruprlaoned
The bride is a ~aduate of in a cup. Suppoaed to 1h1rpen
Grand; Juoctloo High &:boot, the intellect and CT•nt eou~. Colo~ ;)nd ··Bethany Bible Col4 the Eg1ptian1 placed their
1ege, Santa1Cruz. Her husband court• of law and tlielr l.lattle
is a graduate of Lincoln High field• under itl prot.ectlon.
Schooj1 '"Seaftle and Southern The Bloodal.one i11 the companion
Call£ornla College. • birthatone !or 1ilarch. Worn by
The mwlyWeds will reside men, it i1 oft.en cllrved with
In Costa 'M~a. n1onogram1, initial• or creata.
DTERY
m L ll"MI SI.
C"t1 ""'"' • S*-V ,.
Wtar voiir birthalo1tt for Jft'a1 /ff1hit1rr. 1:111d good /orttorr :1W
Th• plte• to 90 ,,.
G1nui~• li rt~don••
South Cotti Pl•1•
l ri1tol ti th• Stn 01190 'Fwy,
HIDE YOUR BIKINI !
Wt kMW lltw le .. It -t•lftl Ill i. ... tllt ~11lr
, .... _,... '" "" lrllil ... ,,.""· .... flffl ..... ..
t1111,i.. W .. 11 IMW J"" lltw lfl iutl I ftw llllllllt"I
The KNIT WIT ... ~~.~ .....
Cotta Meu
MAVCO
\ • \
Restor helps damaged heir,
leeps lovely hair healthy
. • i
Beautiful hairstyles start with healthy hair.'·""7-
And split, broken, domoged hair is revitalized .
wit h Restor treatment;. Mr. David Connelle1
our styli st-,;,anager, willl be giving compli· :.
mentory consultations to demonstrate th& 'j ~
newest irl hair desig n and introduce you to ·.
the restorative qualities of Rester condition· ::
ing treatment.Do coll for on appointment. 1 ;.
It.·.: shampoo, set, and. Restor treatment 6.00 ,
· b I I.•: 111•v to •yty •• ort
•
m•y to 1oulh eot1I pl111
tin ditgo fr••••Y •I brilio1, eoli• 11111• 546.,)] I
" ,.
' . ,.
• ' ,.
•
. .. ,, ' ·~ ~-·71~ i.
.,
,..,,.._.,.._ . .,.
'
.' '
•t
Personal service at llutual ~ogs •
• .....
-
•
The Big M is big enough (over $434,000,000) to pay the nation's
highest Interest on Insured savings ... 5% to 6%.
But equally important-cares enoagh to give you very petsonal service. . -
'
'
. • : • • • I
' ' • •
J
I
,...,.,, •• fr" " . ·-·"' ..
\
<
Jf, OAILY PILOT
TUMBLEWEEDS
YOO·/
H00.00 I
I i'M 0
H°'f:Rf! .'l
MUTT AND JEFF
JUDGE PARKER
Pl.EASE, MAR6.A.lrET
••• !S TlolE JUDGE
IN?'
PLAIN JANE
OH ...
IT'S
YOU
50f 'IOU M#/! A~OTMER OW! 1111Cm
™E.GAL~RV?'
YOU WJ:RE ~XPECTlt-X;, MAY~E,
l'Ol#.RO ~ES?
---.!_.,.__
!DAILY CROSSWORD •• ,by R, A. POWER 1 ·~PERKINS
By ·chester Gould
'(fS, c.MIEF, ANO I
FIGURE Ml ~UR AS
A GOP ~A'S COST M.E A.
Cpc:>Lf;SOO IN HATS!
By Tom K. Ryan
By Al Smith
By Frank laglnskl
ACROSS
1 Explos ive
46 Can.
prov incial
'hirr rxetulives
.-:--'><---::---===-·
wr1pon
5 01zz tlng
r lfett
l O Smitic deity
14 Roman god
15 lngrnuous
16 Regulati on
17 Nol loo
common ,
ll W1ys of
ha nd ll ng
literary
sub j,cts 20 Inhaled and
exhaled air
22 Lassos
23 Not open 24 Ch illy
and wrt
2S Sta nd ing 28 Those
dra llnq
I In lad ies'
' f1s hlons
32 Smokr:
Slang
33 Dutk
hunter's dr vlte
3S Rlvrr of
Russ ia and I Rumania 36 Seawrrd
38 Fierc e
lndfan dog
48 Exp1rss'd
plra sur r •
50 Taverns
51 Astonish
SZ Fortll)ntr, In Latin
Ame rica ,, __ ,.,,
59 Sub ject a
11 ramed
p1 intin11:
2 wort.ls 'l Arabian fa ther
62 Pr1k
63 Cross-
rxa111 lnr
64 RJdgr on
thr surf1ce
of the body
f.5 .A.ct
66 ht a f irry
llllnnrr
67 Re main
DOWN
9 Gro u1> 34 Bums
of fo ur 37 Madr new
10 Tra ins for a coins out
purpos 1: of old
2 words onrs
11 U/'IClt 's wife 39 Kind of
ll C1nad ian wind
prov intr: · 42 Circles
Abbr. 44 Off-co lor
ll Minus material
19 Ce rt ain 47 Suff ici ent skirts: .,, Certa in
\11forma l rel1tivts
21 Dul l sound 51 MoHusk's
l Fisllhoolr. 24 Crrator of oultr
part Sherlock covttlng
2 -Khayya111 Ho lmes 52 Joyful
3 Extra 25 lnte9U111rrrt 53 Speed
4 Part of of thr htad conlrst
thr body 26 Fr lint 54 "War
5 Showrd 27 Ctntu ry --· --!":
MISS PEACH
I j
l
I
r19r1n1ss plant 2 words y
PLENTY,
'IOU
SAY?? 'l!S, ~LENTY!
\0 ''"'" B1 yes
41 Sl111plt
.. _1111th.lf!J Al Tracts
& '"''· 28 '"~" 55 Ex,.ctonlt STE E ROPER
rradrr 's 29 Fish in l 5& Helo jam••• .. •••• •llllfk ttrtlin 57 V. Lopet'
7 Conveyrd a way l htme son;
~S -Yutang :
Chlnrs1 author
l •
'l7
..
" ..
f1 lsr \m111r JD Wr lrd 58 Mor1I
8 Miss 31 Remain Ort obllgatlon
Gardner one's fret 60 Jn favor of
. ' '
"
"
"
'
'
DIRK HAS
OVEl1TAKE>J
DOI.LY~·
MO
()AXfO HEil
INTO HIS CAR·
'
Ll'L ABNER
SALLY BANANAS
GORDO
MOON MULLINS
ANIMAL CRACKERS
!Ii' WKXJPIN<;.
CrlANeS
IN TMe EN!11Ce
COUNTltY,
AND 5HESAVS
PL.£NTV!
--...-.•• ,r;n.,
-AA' 50 WE'U.. NSYUl
KNOW WM'/, SOONER
OR LATE.R-EV'P:-1
LAJ:'J'l 11-J DOGPAT04-·
TAAr'S A NASflJ H~tr/-IT 1$Al'1j
GOOD FOR <Joo.
By John Mii.s
., . •'·
MR.MUM
By MeU
OH. ;r n<OUGHT
"iOU
~\eANr Perr
c,-p/TA ••• ' ,, ,..::,
I)
~
li ~"
. ~ ' '
By Charl•s llanottl
By Gus Arriola
By F.rd Johnson
~-~ A~o~i'? w#EW !
l THOOGHT )'!:)LI
SAID, ':ARDOR·'
,.. ,,,,,.
• By Rog., BoU.n
_:t'U.. aeLlEVf; IT Wfl'Ell
:I S'EE A REPORT" f'WM
1ile S01"6Eal Ga!ERAJ..!
0
0
I
DENNIS THE MENACE
•
' ' • ~ •••• ·~ ........ ·~ " • '"· ' .. t •• -\
DAILY ,.tLDT Stiff P'NI•
What's lfp, Doc?
physicians \Villiam Verderber Oeft) and James
A'lcl{je examine Hal Landon Jr. in a scene from
South Coast Repertory's comedy '1'he Imagin ary
Invalid," playing Friday and Saturday nights in
SCR's downtown Costa Mesa Theater.
'> r
11' DAU~t. LOG
Monday
Evening
MARCH I
6:00 8 I ii Nm Jtrry Dunplt,,
CJ llNIC HIWMrvk:t T11111 Snyd11.
l!I Tiit Allti11 SINN
D JACK LEMMON -"UNDER * THE YU M YUM TREE"
PA RT I-IN COLOR!
0 Six O'Clodl: MD'lit (C) (90)
"Under th• Yv111 Yv111 Tr"" Part I
(com1dy) '&3-Jac.k Lemmon, Cami
Lyn11y, fdit Ad;ims, P;iul Lynde.
Two pea11lt in l<Wt 111et lo lest
their th11<1cltr tom111hb1hty by liy.
tn1 together platoo iu lly. i nd thti1
l1ndlo1d 11templ1 to undermine lht
test by m1kin1 lovt to !ht 11rl.
0 Dick Yin Oft• m TM Fllnbton11
OJ !i1J (]) Sbr Trtt
fin Muftlnltnd '1ht (kaan."
€?:) fls.htr F1mlly
i?l NotltitJO 34 m Winp to Adventurt
ml LI Hou F1milltr con Cons1ttle
(!}ICPLM Nm
1:15 m Art Stud io
1:30 O Ct11did C.mtrt m Tiit flylna Nun
fD HDdppodtt Lodi'
fE Stleded FH1111/Mvait1lt m Tiit De.rt Rtport
Cl) Lu OM1hdH
(!}ABC News
7lll0 8 CIS Nl'ft W11ter Crtinkitt.
D En N8C Nm Dtvid Brinklt)',
Jolin Cl\1netllor, Frtnk Mctltt.
0 wtt1l's My l int?
m @ ())I Lm LllCJ m Dr•rn1!
flD Th• World Wt llvt 11 "Mlmtl
tommunic1t ion." T~e 111unds ut·
tertd b1 chimps, crlckeb tnd
chlc~ens lllustr1!e !ht !ncrtdiblt
v1r!11y tnd 1ubtlety ol 1nlm1I com·
munlc1tion1.
(I!) Christ tllt li'lln1 Wttrd
0) Ml Ainor JIOf Tl
GE Slmpl1m111tt M1ri1
(!} MD'rit C1111
ind C11l1 lo llvt up lhti1 din·
aerous p1stimu.
ONYl'D
fJ !HJ (}.)GE Th a.11 i;,.. J•tt
B•ny hortL GUiit c1l1brity Is Jtck
Btnny. m DH!d Fmt S~ Gutlts: Con·
11!1 SleY•M. M1l1nle, l!Vin c Ca111r.
ID r11o,., .Jciuad
t1!) 'att'"' fer LNi111
ml MlfWlitl YtlOez Sllew
f;(ICl lJ IS([)M1ylieny R.F.D. S1111
ltls his son, Mikt, buy 111 old ur
from Gooblr, 111d I/It boy runs
ri1ht Into tr11ub!1,
0 ~ (I) a;:, Wirt• 1'1'11111111
Mo'lit (C) (Z llr) "¥1nllhed" P•rt
I (dr1m1) '70 -Richud Widmtrk,
Robut Youn11. Ele1no1 Ptrker. Rich·
ard Widm1rk stirs 1s the Presidtnl
o! !ht United St1tet-P1ul Roudt·
bush-in 1 d11m1 of Wt lhln1to11
paliUc.11 intriru• i11Y<1lvin1 tht mys-
teiiou1 diuppe111nce of !ht l'rtsi·
drnl's top 11lvistr i nd closest
friend, ln tn 1d1p!11ion of Ftttchtr
ICnebel's bul·19llin1 novtl.
0 Tiit Fufiti~•
0 @ 00 al AIC MondtJ Movit
(C) (Z hr) "Mutinr on tht Bo11nlJ"
Pert II (dr1m1) '62-M11lon Br111-
do, Tre'l(lf Howud. T11i11. AA 1pie
!tit of mutiny on !ht hi1h 1111.
&J I IPIC!AL I Tiit lll1kln1 tf "Tor1I
Ttr1! Tn!" Tht story of P11rt
H11bor 11 told by men who lo<H
p1rt. Bill Burrud visih with Com·
m111der Mitsuo Fuchid•. lht .llpan·
•• comm111der who ltd !lit 1tt11:•
i nd Comm1nder Minoiu G1nd1, !ht
str1!tfist w110 pl1n11td~ tht 1urpriu
1tt1dl.. m l ttlitin MDl'fid l trn: A StH·
POl'lrtil." Tht )c.lclemy 1w11d·win·
ftin1 dirtetor t1lk1 1bout his rntlh·
od of workin&. how he be11n hil
c11eer i nd his reltlloftthtp with his
1ctor1 tnd 1d1.-.
EI!)lO lllinlfles
@ri)Hoy
€0 NltKIM
''"0 18 (1)-..,
0 Ctndld C.111111
EID Musical1/Ptttor'1 Dtsll
@ri) Cldtnt de AnfllltlH
lD:llO 1J 9 ()) Ctrol l 11111ett Show
Guub: Miki Dou(l11, B1r111~1tt1
.. .. , .. ' . ' . ~--.
'Dansonata' Program
Youth Ballet Impressive in Mesa
By TOPi1 BARLEY
Of ,.., IUllY ,tltf Staff
This critic needs very little
persuasion lo abandon his
Saturday gardening In favor
of an afternoon or ballet but
it was with particular interest
that we put down the trowel
last weekend an d headed for
Costa Mesa High School and
th eNe wpo rLBal let's
''Dansonata'' program.
We had heard many Im·
prcssive things about this
young ballet enterprise and
the quality of the performers
being processed at its ap·
prenlice workshop but this
was our first real opportunity
in a hectic musical season
to personally assess the pro-
cess of artistic director Mona
Frances.
If the varied and cleverly
paced pro~am we enjoyed is
to bt our crilerion of the
Newport Ballet's stature in
the dance world then all we
can say is that our earlier
intelligence had g r c s s I y
underestimated lhe calibe r of
the orga nization .
It has several young dancers
of distinct promise and it has
one young artist who should
be snapped up immediately
by any profe!Sional company
interested enough to take in
her work in two very clr:ver
ballets ,offered by the group
-"Two Dances for Four and
Three" and "Amoeba Oh," by
far the best thing on· a very
entertaining program .
Patsy Wllllams is the most
promising young ballerina to
come our way in a long time
and her work Saturday can
enly leave us with the con·
clusion that her days al the
Newport Ballet are limited ir
this fine young dancer has
her sights set on ballet stages
of a higher strata.
H the splendid Patsy wasn't
Miss Frances' pride and joy
before this interesting pro·
gram got under way she must
have been by the conclusion
of the highly entertaining
"Rehearsal" -an exercise
on score by Poulenc, cleverly
MY EXPERT
10 ROOFERS
. NEED WORK .!
let H -yoo lilt -NY·
We do tN 11 • • t r••flllf
wort 11 llrio -
WENEDA ROOFING
choreo1f1phtd by MI 1 1 several balle l.i that we would an organization that has
Frances beraeU. like to Stt ptrfor med at a brought some fine youna male
She had won her laurels higher level -"'Amoeba Oh," artists to the balle~ world.
long befort that, however, most certainly, Well done, fo.1lss Frances;
with . some inspired dancing It was with great regret you and your dancers are lo
Jn lhe beauti(ully staged lh1l we noted the absence be congrat ulated on your
"Amoeba Oh'' and the clever· or male dancers in the sple nd id ''Dansonata. '' But do
ly danced "Two Dances," "Oansonata" program . It y,·ill not, if you can avoid it, limit
Miss Williams brought poise be eve n more regrettable tr your offerings to the ballerina
and grace to both ballets and this omisslvu reflects a lack -the male has hi!:I place
an inborn improvisation in of lntrrest among the young in ballet and no ballet pro·
several movem ents that can males or the Harbor Area and gram is really co m p I e I e
not have escaped M i s s we can only point to the without his b a I a n c i n g
Frances' attention. And. thank 1'"Laiigiluiiniiaii8eiiiiaciihiiCiiiii•iiiciiBiiaiilliieiil •"iiiiiipiireiisciiniic<iiii. iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii
the Lord, she delightrully 11t-.1
tends to something that many on the
ballerinas everlook in the beat f ! !_.,.;re!-'' Peninsule and swirl (J r the dance -_ !...•__ _ _ l.·--67~048
the smile. the dazzling smile Open 6:45 p.m.
that should be there on the
ballet stage even if you 're
executing your grand jete with
a broken ankle.
But do not let this attention
to the bri lliant Miss Williams
be construed as an implication
that tbe work of her com-
panions in this charming pro-
gram was far ·below the level
of this exceptional young
artist.
Plus
Th is 2nd
GREAT
FEATURE
On the contrary, M Is s
Fr a rn:es h a s far mo re s w a ns' I ~'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!'!!!!!oil I
than geese in a company that
worked very hard Saturday
and with great success in an
ambitious program that would
have taxed the resources of
ballet organizations with much
more impressive stalislics in
the payroll and personnel
divisions.
Hilloah 1.1inder and Linda
Smith caught this crltic's eye
on more than one occasion,
lhe former dancer, particular·
ly, for her fin~ solo work
in Tchaikowsky's "'Spanish
Dance."
Miss Smith put in so me very
dedicated dancing in "Amoeba
Oh" and "Two Dances" and
we particularly enjoyed her
cleverly executed routines in
the second movement of the
latter ballet She had lo take
second pl ace to a brillia nt
Miss Williams, to be sure,
but it was a most distinguish·
ed runner·up spot.
Mis.s Frances picked her
program and paced her young
dancel'3 most capably and
gave us, in the process ,
NO. 1 ON
THE -COAST
Your Hometown
Newspaper Is
The DAILY PILOT
GEORGE C. SCOTI'
Academy Award No minee
far Best Actor in 'Patton'
... now in a delightfully
different role!
When they reach out
I
for each other ...
they touch
every heart
... with wa rmth,
charm and
laughter!
. Joanne
~C./WlodttlUd
"They Might Be Giants~ to-.._, ___ _
Jack Gitford-c';o::;';,...-{r;;,i.,_M1"';;'i~11"•• %'-.--· -· ···-·"·...: .. -•Ol'I-•If~''-"''"""'""' ·~·-•-l'ltl\JOl •l~lll"w~::-i
Pick Your Own
STARTS
,WEDNESDAY
MARCH 10
'Oscar' Winners
f:JO u 9 (jJ GMn1111ok• Sally fe11111
removn two bullets from Pik1'1
slloulder but ii fc1ced le 10 lo
DodR• City to seek 111tdic1l Id·
vir.I ind lr11ns lh1! sht h1s 1n
ucaped outlaw in lier homt on
P1rt II of .. Pike."
P1t1rs. T h.t DAILY PILOT. in cooptration with Buena Park's
O l ir 5 Nns llevi" S1ndtrt, l>fovie/o nd l\1nx M11seum. of ft.rs Teaders 11 chance to parti·
Birney MGrris. cipate in nationwide balloti1tg to select popular winnt.r.t ilt
0 ltrttf Wirf HfWI the "Osca r Derby." Week's vacation for two in hfexico City
. or Honolulu a11d a place of honor at the Stars' Hall of f'ame mN ... Geort• P'11tn11nr Htl Fish· Awnrds Ba11q 11.et in Hollywood await the TIOt ional winner.
man. Vote now by filling out and clipping out th.is bcillot: CJ Q): (J) m Rtd Sktlton Tony
Rlf\dtll 1ue.st·S!l'I.
Ql TrM•,. "'Diamonds al Dt1d . _____ .. ______ --______ -
Mtn's caw."
m Wotld l'I'• ?t1ark an "X'' in the box which appears tn 0 Vlr1lni1 G11h111t ~ Charlie
C1ll1s, ICtrtn V1l111tine, John Dn·
khon and John Tutl\1 1uest. 0) lllCKltl
fJ tHi Cil m ters Milt I Dttl CE Hit def Mo1111nto 1 front of your selection. Vote for only one person
Monty Hill hosts. I
0 Miiiion S Mowit (C) (Z hr) 10:30 B 01t1r W•k MO¥it: (1 hr) "LI I
•·0onov1n's Rttf" (comedy) ''3-Stnd1" (dr1m1) '56 -Anthon) 1 Jllhn Wayne, Dorothy L1111our. [I. Qui nn, Giu!ie1t1 ,M1sin1. A brut1I
•IHI et 1:10 enly
... ...,. .. ~-((ll•• "'"''--••••101 ----·-------Aho B1u b<1ro He,~h•y In
"TH E I AIY MAICIR" Ill
DIJLY I'll.In' I 9
PORT THEATRE
2tOS I. COAST HWY., CORONA DIL MAI-67UW
10 ACADEMY A WARD NOMINATIONS
e llST ll'ICTUIE
e IEST ACTOR-O.Orge (. Scott
e IEST DIRICTOllt e IEST STORY •nd 6 MORI NOMINATI ONI
POPULAR • • .. --i. -. I
"A war movie
,for people
who hate
,war movies!"
-Re1<Rttt/,
,Holldry Mi1g4Lin~
"IMPECCABLE PRODUCTION ... ,.,,;,;scent,,
filmdom's 1re1t entert1iMttnt films of the IGlden days.•
-I OltO,,IU
"TOUCHING ••• UNFORGETIABLE ""
LOVE STORY" ; ALL
-MAY MANN. fABUlOUS LAS Vl~ MAGAZINE ~£W
.-... ~--..a.t_,_
ANNA CALllER W SIW.L Til.ll1llf OALITM . •C.. ·-mo•:a JI I ·-~ --~sooo TO LOOK AT ... beautilull~ muted tGnes
mtkt i 1em tlrthitr than the 1939 ve1siGn,M -L.A. r1w
W"td•l'I J:U .. t :U
5c., ka-1' lj,
4: L,.6:1,.I: 1S.IO:t1
l1t So.,111 C~1t Pl•u
EXCLllSIVE
ENGAGEMENT
FrH l'•r•it11
I USEIYID SEAT IHG.AGIMIHT'
r.I '11atiiJTiiP. >14LIWI . --635-7&01
Kids Like to Ask Andy
' Ali Mac6raw Ml
' Ryan O'Neal ,
• l!ill'-Il• Cll.OR ~ ID\ \ .. --~
$U,,ORTING> .ACTOR-CHIEF DAN GI ORGI
.,
DUSTIN HOff~'
"UTilf 816 MAN "
Panavision•k.Micolor• ~ ..
Chief Don George • Foye Dunaway
N1vy min li'lin1 on 1 South P1tilic sirens m~11 uses • ~r. 11m~l1· I
Island wi!h his Pcly11rsi1n wHe 1nd mlndtd 11~ !°' Ml"ff ~1m. te1vint I
or film in each category. Please be sure to complete
the 25·Y.'ord statement at the end of the baJ lot and
fill in your nam e, address and phone number so you 1
can be contacted if you win the prize trip and ba n· 1
quet invitation. All ball ot~ must be returned (in 1 perso n or by mail) to the DAILY PILOT by 5 p.m.
STEVE
MCOUEEN
AS ~fiULUTT~ WINNER OF 10 ACADEMY AWARD NOMINATIONS
family finds his idyllic tlist1nc1 htr no d11J11ity In tt111 study ol 1 lhre1!ened when 1111 Q:rown d1 u1h· itintunl amiYtl tilt.
fer by previous m1rri111 1rrivt s m Bill Jolln1 NIWS
fmm Bosten in se1 rch cl him. m Truth ot Con11qutncn Bob III lncertklu111br1
a.ni1r 11osts. 11:00 D a({) Ul Ntws
(b 11Ttkrs 1 nirl D @ @ (S film
ED CilJ W1tclltr1 CG lumni1t1
Charles Cht mphn 1nd Art Seidtn·
b1um to·*' this Mmu lot1Bln1
on !11ppenin1s In LA.
€?:) Ctntm• lO
@ri) LI DMlll
7:5S (!!) Cvntlon dt St111ndo1
l ;OO 0~ (j) m ltU&fl·I~ Ruth Buz·
11, ti fil m qUttn ltYtfM Blo.uo111.
O&J Ntws I
fJ lllO¥i1: "Unitn Slltltn" ("'YJ" I
tery) '50 -Willf1111 Holdtn . .lln 1
St1rlln1-81rry Frttr1r1!d. r m Mowit; (C) "T\i TllrM Mud'1· I
tHrl" (1dl'tinlut!) '4&-t.1111 T~r~.
u . Cent Kelly. June Allyson. I
m "'' th• Cloct Oll WllidPr•
It reunited on Cl''"" with hrr ill:lO II !Hi (I) Mtn Crltlln
l1rt nd11Y scrHn lcY11 Rtmon Arm·
11ron1 (Arlt .Jllflnson). 0 ~ (I) m JollnnJ C.!1011 I
0 @ (J) m Ntwlpld C11111 ~b 0 aJ Diet Cmtt Gu1sts: t.hrto 1
Eubink1 hosts. Tho1111-Ctrol Chlnninr, Edwtrd
m T• Ttll !tit Trutll
Ill Mvsh:.1 J t.tr.1111
1:051$) AQul Tits 1'1tlnts
l:JO IJ a ()) Htrr1 lMt7 tucy t1\.s
up 1k)'lllvlnr •• • 1111kt·btliM
llGbby In tn tnort 111 C11111¥1nt1 111111
Tuesday
Albtt. I
m Mcwit: "Unth1in1d" !dram a) 1
'S5-f:lroy Hi11ch. 811but Htlt. I
I 1:00 II Mtwlt: "H!1ll Ktll" fdllmt) 'SI
-John Derek, U1lne Stewart. • I
ao •-r
%;)0 11 '-* lril Siw: "We1111n " I
Ill• lld Ctull'1" (dr1m1) '51-
Rod Ca1ntrtr1, Ruth H11al)'. I
-1
I 0 "T1lt .,.,. tf ftr•tlt" hffl•
ITli) ''0 -Heruy fond•, Oorril 1
on Monday, March 29.
Best Actor
0 MELVYN DOUGLAS for "I Never Sang For
My Father" 0 JAMES EARL JONES lo• "The Great White
Hope " 0 JA CK NICHOLSON for "Five Easy Pieces"
0 RYAN O'NEAL for "Love Story"
0 GEORGE C. SCOTI for "Patton"
Best Actre••
0 JANE ALEXANDER for "The Great White
Hope" 0 GLENDA .JACKSON fo r "Women In Lo•e"
0 ALI MA C.GRAW for "Love Story"
0 SARA MILES !or "Ryan's Daughter"'
0 !' ARRIE SNODGRESS for "The Diary of A
Housewife"
Be•t /lfotlo11 Picture of 1970
D "AIRPORT" (Unlver8al) 0 "FIVE EASY PIECES" (Columbia)
0 "LOVE STORY" (Paramount)
D "M'A'S'H" !20th Century Fox) D "PATION" (20th Century Fox)
WHY I VOTED FOR TIUS PICTURE (In 25
"words or less): ..........................•
.. ' .... ' ..... ' ' ....... ' ............... .
·······································
.. ''' ... ' ... ' ... '.' '' .. '' '' ' .......... .
Bowdon. 1 Name ............... , .• , , Phone .. , ..•.. OAYTIM ~ MOVIES m"BI 111111..,.. (drtllll) ~I ·---- _ Vidor Mcltflen, Ht1lht1 hi111, Streel Address •• , •... ~-, ... , , , , .. , •.•..
t :OO 9 "Tiit W1i.lftl HHl1'" (1dvtntur1)! Pr.ton Fotttr. I ~ .
'49-Randolpll Scott. £U1 1111!111. t:«I e '1\t Ot!\ Ctnt«'"' (mr,t•r'J') I City · · · · · · · · • • · • • • · · • · • • • • · • Zrp · · · · · · · • "f1' bJ flllf!r' (m•J!JfJ') '42: -'35 -Lutillt Btl!, Miry S """" I _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _
Rlth11d Carlson, Nancy Kelly. CUl1on Wtbb. W1lllt"I Btnd!J,
t :JO O (CJ "Lrdl• l•!ltf" (dra,,,•) ·s~
-Otlt llobtr1son. Annt fttriell. Z:OO G (C) "AJteht 1t111fl• l••lttrfl)
lutnil1 Noori. '6~ud!t Murp~y. Mlth11I Dtntt.
1, •
Mall ballat to: "Oscar", c /o DAILY PILOT~
PO Bo x 1560, Costa Mesa, C:A 92626
EXCLUSIVE!
FIRST RUN !!
ELLIOTT GOULD
DON SUTHERLAND
MARCIA RODD
IN
Their L1test
"THE LITTLE
MURDERS"
JUNIOR MATINEE
SAl AT 2 P.M.
TWO BIG THRILLERS
"THE DEADLY BEES"
._>.ND
"THE VULTURES"
All Seats 75c
INCL. BEST PICTURE-ACTOR :io,., ............ .
IN MISSION VIEJO 'I•i\'l"l'f)N
EDWARDS
CINEMA VIEJO
~· .. D f r;o F'WY ~I l4 P.ll IUAJ'lulf
830 6'>90
GF.OllGF. r. S(~YIT o
1., Q.o .. •o/O•"''' $ Pon ..
il!l'l KAlll. MAI.DEN
~I
•
•
' ,
>' ~ ,
.. -~ ..
•
•
-
20 0"1LV PILOT s Monday, MMth 8, 1971
LEGAL NOTICE LEGAL NM"ICE
MOTIC• Of' MOM-lt•ll"CINllalLIT'I' I' "1 -NONc. 11 f1HefW ti-11111 t11t -FICTITIOUS aUSINl!1• ~-wll ftPI lie r-11>11 !or Ml.ME STl\TIMINT
'"" MM1 w Htllllllltf ctntr~llf lw Tiit lolkiwl"" ..,_ 15 dolnt llul"'-"
-ofll« ll'lltl ntl'Hlf, .. W tiler I I. 1!111 ..... ZINOS. SHt H._t ll ... ~ N.-t
DllM t1111 Sit\ &1¥ It! Fell., 1'11 8tldl. C1UI . .,...
lltvlfl "•'"' w.,.r R1v_.w lffoor lllldllw I. a-....,._ ~I -0..•ltYHle Cir .• S1nt1 l'llf fllclltY, aau oc-fninl. N.-t
....... C111f. Bud!, CtlH. t2UQ
l'ubllllwd Or-. Coal! DtllY l'!lol Thll bu1J11111 le 1111"9 <on6ut:ltd b'
M•l'Cfl I, J, U, 1'11 SOl-11 all lndlw•t
lla,mond Lerew ·~ l'ulWlll'led Or-CNS! Dtllr Pllllt LEGAL NOTICE M••cll L u. tt. n. 1t11 •11
LEGAL NOTICE
NEW OPEL 1900 FOUR·DOOR SEDAN MAKES APPERANCE
Buick 0.1l•rs Displiying New V•sidn of Import
In High Gear
Opel Sedan Making Debut
......
CEllTIFICATI! 01" aU11NISI LEGAL NOTICE FICTITITOUS NAME --c=='"°~===c-ccccO"""-I The undersigned "" i;erllfv thef •re Cllll<IUC:flll9 • M lnat •I 176J NtWP<>rl NOTICE 01' MAllSHAL'S SALE Ave1M1, Cosl• MeH, Ctllkwnl•, ... -NI. 1'5 Ql ~ Holl•wood OH Comptnf Pltlnll!I n tt.e fictitious firm_ntme of MESA PAWN
• ' · Ind lll1t wKI firm h aimPQSetl ol S!HMn W. radford, Dtftnda<!I. the k>llow!ng nnom, wt1cq I
a, Ylrt11e of tn e•.cutlon iuued on kllt ntme1 n ,.-eDnlt rv n , "" by Ille M1tnl(l1>tl fol~'."' 1>ll~et of reskhnce •re 11
C01,1r1, of Ctllfornlt. CG11nlw al L•ll Arti.v• Verll"11 )60D4°S II
A119ele5. L-k-0. Judkl1I Di.ttkl. NtlO'POrl fie.ch, c'iulomlt. 1 • ' 0 ' e '
voon • luOernt'fll enleretl In ltvor cf W1fllf0fl Vetdufl Ut1 Tustin A
.-.1111'1--011 C........,ny I I IU<l!lmenl Cnlt Mest C•UiW...lt ~e ..
crectllor ""' 1111ln11 S1tt>llen W. flrld'll>l'd Oiled Febr~trv u lt71.
IS il>ot"""'I ~IOI", 1howlng I Ml J.nhur VHoUlt
bll1nc• "' n ,nJ.01 1ct1111i. .,.,. "" Winston Jo~ Vtrtl n
'llld lud1mtn1 en ""' d11e "' """ Slit• of c1n1on111, Or11191 c'!..n1:.·
ln ... nce "' Hkf e•Kvtlon. I htW lf'lllCI On FetlNt,., lt lf71 brior -
11-' ttl ,... rl,h!, 11111! Ind lnl1<11I 1 Natlry Publk In' tnd f. ukl e Stitf
of Hkl lud9mfllf Olbtor In Ille ",_.,,, peo-11¥ -lrH Nltlur \'ef'dult ind
Jn tN Coim11' •I Ora1'19i'. 51tlt of Winston \'lll'dUll •nown to me to bt
C1trlornl1. M1trlbed t l follows: ttw ~ wf1ose ntfM!I '"' .ubKrfbed Loil 'H, Tr1cl 9111, lloot cf MIPS, 111 1f1.e w1fhln lnslrvment 1 n d
'"'' 2s..M In .... C-ty of Or1119e. td;,_ledffd llwy UICI/led 1111! lllf>I Stilt cf C1tlfor11lt ""' lottlfd ti: (OFFICIAL SEAL) .
tu Vlt Lldll Soud, N""POrt aucl!, Mtory fltlll Motion
C11Uorn!1 Nol1rv P11bllc-C1tltornl1
"IOTICE IS HEREllY GIVEN !hi! Prifldp1J OHict In
"" T..e1<11v, M1•dl JO, l"l. I! 10:00 Oringr county
ll"dcct A.II>. 11 '""'' al CCK1•ll!o1ne, Mw Cornmlulon E•olre1 ~' Well 11!1! Stre,t, Cltv of Cost1 "Pril '· 1'1l Me11, .C•lflorn(1, CG11n,.,. 111 0•-t. S111t P ublished Or1nge Cots! 01lty Pl1ol
of c111111m!a, I wUr sen ti 1>Ybllc Ftbl'u1rv n, March 1, L J5, lt71 3'J-71 •ut!lon IG l'W hi•"'"' blGder, fOf c••"l-----------------'I
In ltwful mMtY of tl!e Vnltf'd Stales, LEGAL NOTJC tll Ille r11ht, !!tit Ind lnlertsl "' . E
11ld IUOOmenT Ofblor In 11\t itiovel-------------1
dtsc:rlbetl 1rD11trtv. or 10 ..,ucll Tl\er«il ..... 517
11 ml, bl ntct Ulrf To 11tl1tv Hid CEllTIFICATE 01' •VllNEl1
•xeculltlrl, with 1c.crued lnl••nl Incl l'ICTITIOUS NAME
coils. The und..-sklned Oot!1 (1r1lfv hi-'1
Olltd If Co1l1 M111, (tllll>l'llll . Mirth CO,.,,llCling t busineis ti UQ3 Otllwtre
4, 1971. 5TrNI, Hunllntlon Stich, Cttllornl1, OILL .. 110 0. WILIOllSON. under 1Nl tld!lio\11 fir"! nt"lt or Hl.Q· ,_.,.ti ... 1 PRODUCTS tnd lh1t uld firm 11
MunltlPll Court, c-al ttlt lol'-1119 perion, whole
Or11111e Covnl'I' ntmt In lull tl'ld plt(t of rnldtnc1
1>11rbor Judkltt Oi1trkt Is 11 fol~: fly C. A. Goodwin. Rldllnf S. You.,., l~OJ Dtltwlft ""'°'""' S!rttt, Huntln§lon Betel!, C1lllO!'nl1. MtCNAl!L G. l'fOTT 011et1 Febr111ry 11, ltn
Pltl!lllff's Alttt1W1' Rlcllanf s. YCIUnt n• E. Oc111 11¥11~ ltlil• .... Slate of C11\tornl1. Orann COl,ll\IY :
L-a1ldl, Ctlltw!olt tllt2 On Febnlt" II, 1'71. be-lor1 "''·
Putllllf>ecl °''"" Coatl Dtll' Piiot • NG11rv Pl>bllc In •rid '°' ltld Sltle.
Mtrch I, 15. 77, 1t71 ~11 Ptriorwonw •-•red llicll.lrd 5. You"' ---,-..,----c~~---lt,_., ti mt IO be 11\o perJGr! wllott
LEGAL NOTICE nttnl I~ 1ubsulbed •o tl'le wllllln
-
------------lln1trume-nl Incl K -....Wlfd9td IM tXKlli.d lfl.e Simi. COSTA MES" SANITA•Y OlSTltlCT (OFFICIAL SEAL!
O•AN'>I! COUNTY, CALll'ORNIA Ml,., lletn M<M"lan
NOTICE INVITING llDS Noftrv Publlc-Cilil<ll"n!i
"IOTtCE IS HEREllY GIVEN lh8! Prlnclpal Of!lct 1n •••ilel pr~1l1 wm bl •ectlvf'd tl't' Oranoe CGllnlY
•h• tlh CIHk. on blhlll of the Cos11 Mv Commlulori Explret
M•ll 51nll1rw D!1lrlcl, 1! ~· olllct Acrll t, ltll
In ~ (llY H1tl, n F1I• o ..... Ca.ti Putiti.ned Drlnff Coast Dall• Pllol.
Mell. c1mam11. unm '"" "°'-'' ot 11 :11Q Febru.rv 22, M1rc11 I. 1, 15, 1t11 211·11 1.m. on ~ 2nd d1Y cl April, 1971,1---.,.,----~-----I
ti wttlc~ tlmt lhtv wm bl """nff LEGAL NOTICE oubllcl• 1na ,.Ad 11oucl In tl>o cCMJncll0 _____________ 1 chambtrs far FVllNISl'ltNG .-.LL LABOR r AND M'°'TERIAL5 FOR Tl'lE C:ON. NOTICE 01' SHl!llll'l''S SALi!
STRUCTION OF SANITARY SEWER DONALD F. DUNCAN. Plt!nllff "'· MAIN IN NATIONAL AVE"IVE, OAK JOHN W. ORYDEN, e!c., Otltndtnt.
STREET "NO FEOERAL AVENUE FOii. Joi.I. tOUI
PllEStDl!NT PUMPING STATION. flw virtu~ ol 1n •xfcullori luutd an
A M'I of pY,nr., 1.Poellk..lllonl I nd ~S Janu•,..,, 1'11 lw ,,,. SUJ>erlor C°""· ot,..r '°"tr•ct occu-nh "''' be oo-Coun!Y cf I.GI .l.r111!lt•, Slit• o1 l1lned 11 !ht olfk• ol tllt CllY CIP<l C1lilO!'"nl1, u_, • lud1men1 ent•r•d
11-1 -II GI 11$.•. '°' cll1rtt In '""°' cf DO"IALO F. OUN CAN t t cf SI.~ wlll be ..,_ 11 1!1nollf'd bv 1""9nwnt (fedltor Ind 191!nsl JOHN
mall. PLEA'E MAIL 'E .. A R A l E w. DRYDEN. tllO known •• JOHN CHECKS. W DRYDEN, JR .• t 1 IUOO-n! d<llto•,
E.ctl bid thtH bt rololdl "" lht p.--.1 ll'l-1"' t ne-t blltnct of U0,! ... 7'
lorm 11\d In lhe "''""'' pr.,.,ld!'CI Jn •c!.,.llv lllM on itld ludvmenl an tt.• lht conttd -h. aflld Nit bt llllf cf the In'""'' Pl 11!11 eKKV!lori, tc~nled by 1 c.rlltltd or (Ii.Ill'"''' I hive le..lt!d ......,., tll tr.. rl11!1, t11lt
chedl ar 1 bid tloro:I tor ""' 1t11 IAll in1ertd ol H id ludvment dtlllor tlltn let"> al IN 1..-nt of llW bid. In the ..,._..,., In 11\.t County of Ortng1,
m.l<N ••~•bit Ill lht Cot.It Mil.a 51nlt1rv Sl1lt of C1liloN!l1, cleKrlbld •• lot-s: Ol1lrlcl. LOii Jn Ind S14. Traci f01. Book
NOTICE n FVITHElt GIVEN thll 11. P19n 21 IG J6. Mite. of ~Pi.
!f>f Soard ol Dlrectoo of 1111 COllt COUflfv R«0rder'1 Oil!ce, County of Me11 S•nlltry Olllrlci "" llerttofore Ori....,, prc1H'fv C~IY lnowt1 11
•1tHRlhed • P•tv•lllnto rtlt Ind Kile 20ll YI• Men•-· lido 1111. c.111 .... 11.
of .,...,,., I" 1ccord•n« w1tt. ""' Ill Toeelhtr 'l'ltll 111 incl al119ull• 11\o
be "Id In 11'11 <ONlrvcilorl GI Ille Unemtnb,. II I rt d 11 Im t n I 1 UWI
·-tnllllld lrnP-h. Th1! .aid -ien11nces llltl'ellf1to t>elolMlnt Of r1tt tnd sctlt w11 tdoltlfd bw !ht In .,..,..lit 1pperl1lnl1111.
Carl Carstensen
Buick is now introducing a
new four-door version of its
Opel 1900 series, providing lhe
largest assortment of body
popular import was first in·
troduced, according to 0. f'.
Frost. Buick's general sales
manager.
The 1900 four-door sedan
styles o f f e r e d sinct the
Opel with four-door con·
venience and is the answer
to many dealer requests for
a car of this size and design.
The 1900 series, which made
its appearance this y e a r.
fe atures its own distinctive
styling with long~ looking
hoods, wider tread both front
and rear, and power brakes
with front discs as standard
equip ment.
Features also include one·
piece front door wndows,
divided rear door wndows, and
large rear tail lamp.s and
backup lights with wide rear
window.
Full coil springs are in front
and rear wilb a modified
three·link suspension in the
rear, combined and are with
new wider treat.
, The sedan is 164.6 inches
long. three and one.halt inches
longer than the regular Opel
twO<loor sedan version. It is
64.3 inches wide: as compared
to 61.9 In the regular two-door,
and 54.5 inches in height as
compared to 55.4. The
wheelba se, al 95.7, is a half
inch longer than the two-door
sedan.
ll Is powered by the 1.9
liter engine which hai been
equipped with hydraulic valve
lirters for quieter operation.
This engine carries an SAE
rating of 90 gross horsepower,
and operates efficiently with
lower exhaust emissions on
unleaded or low lead fuels.
The Opel rr.odels, which are
built by General Motors in
Europe, were introduced in
the United States in 1964 with
sales of approximalely JS,000
units the first year. Sin~
then. with some 2.100 Buick·
Opel dealers offering the cars.
sales volume has risen to the
near 90,000 mark.
Since its introduction . a total
of 380,733 Opels have been
so ld in the United States
through the 1970 calendar
year.
OLDSi\IOBILE RECORDS
NEW SALES HIGH
Oldsmobile sales during !he
month of February broke all
existing records and pushed
th e divislion 's retail delivery
f<W tht calendar year to an
exceptional 36 percent above
lhe first two months or 1970.
William Buslon, general sales
manager announced today.
"Enjo)'ing a very strong
final period'' he said. "our
dealers retailed 24.763 new
Oldsmobiles to bring the
February total lo 53,608. This
is ll percent greater than our
l!ootrd of Dlr.clor1 W Rtsolullon No. NOTICE 1$ HEREBY GIVEN 11111
10.1u "" 1~ 2'11\ d11 ol Otcemlllr. Ofl. .lwMl•f· 10 /Mrcl! lt11, •t. 10:00 LEGAL tlOTICE
lfJ'll Ind i, ~ ffll )n fftt effiW of o'tloelt A,M. 11 Mllll-t.ol»r, touf"'°""'l------...'-------
11'\f •t..Hl1t1nt s.c:reltrf, 11 F1!r Drive, 700 Civic C1nlt r Orlw Wt1I, City of NOTICll 01' INT•NTION TO l!NGA01!
(0111 MIH, c1111..-nle. n..1 Hhl ••It Stnlt Ant. Count\' of Ori n••· 511te '" TNli SALi! OF ALCOHOLIC
11'111 Kile 11 M•tln rrlerrtd lo tlld of Ctll!Ofnll, I wlll Hll ti 111bll( ll\IEIAGEl
tdooltd Jn tl!lt nall(t •• lllGUVll lully auc:tlon lo tht hl91'>ell blckltr. lor c11~ Mt•cl'I ], 1'1\
tAll comoltttlT HI fl!r"lh herein. 1..0 In lawlul "''"'" OI 11'11 Uft!IH S11tt•. TCI Wllom 11 M•• Concern:
11111 ukl K tll, 11 1c1Do1f'd bv ttld 111 tlM rlfll!. tlllt and lnlttlll al S110h1c:t lo luu1nct of ll!t llcen•e
resolullon, ts midi 1 Pl•! of 11111 ,.aid IUdlrment Ottltor In the lbove IPPlltd fl>I'. llPllC:t 11 htreby given lhtl
notice by rtllltMt. dtKrtlled P<OHrlY, or 10 mvch ll'>e•to! Ille ul'lder11-111d P•OP•nn la sell a\c111'111llc
Tl\I contr.clO!'" ' 1~~11. In I ht •1 ""' be nec115•<v 10 t1U1h st!d btv•r1g11 11 lht oreml111, d~K•lbt<I
Pll'for'lll-• of lf'lt -r11 and i:tno utcll!lon, .. 1111 .c<'11tf lll"mt •"II 11 tonow.1 •
••-"· coriform i. tM L1bor Cedil! mst1. 27'M iouth Coa11 6!vd .. L1111,,.. 8etch, of tM 11th el Ct 111omli 11'111 oltltr Otletl 11 ~nit ""'' C111tornl1, Purw.nl to i.vch lfll~llon. tht un·
1 .... 1 llf uld 11111. ....,11c1blt lt1'1rel0, Feb•111,., ''· 1'11. c1e<1lened 11 -tvl119 lo the OeHrtm1<1t wlll'I the 111teP!lon ontv of llldl v1rl1llonJ J.1.MI:$ A, MUllCK. ot Aklll!Ol)c ltvtft~ Conlrol lor
1, mt• 11f •-Ired under the 1Hcl11 Slttrlff.Cor-111u1nce bv lr1n1t.r Of 1n t!cohl>tlc
1111vtn Jll{irwtnl It wtll(h o•cceedlnts c-1y of Or.rive. C..ntornl1 ""'''''' uc-fOf llcrmftl tor lf'ltH ""'r....,,...r 1re ltk"" aflll 'llflllch l!IW B• (. A. fttndtll, t1rll'flltft 11 fo!lowl:
Ml Detn luPll".-Old ... , ... P<GYll!ont °""'fy ON SALE flEER .. WINE lflont Of "" Ltbor Cedil!. Prtft•....U ta l1bor FULOP, ROlSTON, FIW Pvblk Ettlnt Plac1)
tNll bl 1Jven 111'11'1' I~ lllt 1r11-r IVllNS I. McM.ITTll(I( Ar11'01'1'1 dftlrlng lo _,, .. Ille IHUtncl ~ ... ltw. ~11-llff'I ,.,,_, ef -" l~(I! mlf lilt I ....-llled
TM <9nfl'"KW 111111 Ult Ofl1f un· ... , w~ a1 ..... Sllill .. t<ollltl w11h MIY olllct of "" Oetltrtmenl
"'lf'IVIKIUrlll 1Nlel'lt l1 1•od<lt.M In llW ~ Hiii .. Clllfettll Wilt C11 Aklholk ·1\111"-Control wllllln
OnHM Slllft 111111 """' 1Nf'11111<1 ... ec1 Pvtlll.,,.., NIWoort H1 •110f NeWI Prtu ,. "'" tf""" O.lt llM or--1remlW1
.... tt-rltl• "'"'IUIKNrlld In ttw Vnlllld "'"'bll'ld Wllll 0.11• PllOI, N•--1 W'f'1' Or1t -ltd. llt tlnt 11rovr•h !Or SI•~ ~ffltl•ll'I' •11 , ..... "'AltriAll 9et<1\. C11lfoml1 Ml<'Cl'I \, •• u. lt11 dotnl•I II trllYkled by !f'I'. The prf"T'IN) ••Dlll<UUd 1n lM Ulll•tll· 5111'1. ·~ l"e 4.u.n ,,. ._ oc.,.Nd tor 1'Mt 1111 1111 1lcohClllC ~• of 9llt ter1trt<I Dtvt•~t.. Tiit torm of vtrlllclllon "''" N• Md tl'llll bt t«11l.,..roel ~1111'¥1 M oblllMCI trom 1nw ollkt of ""'
It II INllle .,. 1 bl.,. """" tu•"'\lltd o...rtmenl. W t111 (nll M-S111ll11Y Ol•l•kl LOEWENGIJTH, EIO.._.. H.
•11111 U Pt11<M 111 acctr'lltncl w11~ 1"' KIDS LOVE O'CONNl!LL, 01ni.1 F. ...-vtllom Of 1111 l'r.mtt rt<tvl•fflle<ill Publllfl«I Dr .... 1 c .. 11 Otil-,_ilol
l!tdl ltHIWI' lnVt1 " tlunlf'll tnd M1rdl I, 1911 tfS·11
•M ,..t<111tllflt11 .. l'J'OUlfltl ..., i.w. U "'"'TE LEN ......... D"K"" • I .. "'"I l :t'L.LJ Mt\I ,..,, .. ,,. ~~' ,..__ lf\t 111111
19 "'ltd ....,. I' ell trldt. • --
Olltcli 11\lt<ll "l. ltfl s d . J•nt ... ,...1, atur ays 1n Allllllnt S.Crtll"
aY OlllOll"lt (ll THP" , • .,. •• ""'"°'' The DAILY PILOT Oii TH~ GO•TA I'"''" U.NITAllY OIST ... t(T, • 1
. ' 1,oot•s OP OIL '-AINTINGS
WHOLL,AlfWA"IHOUSI
OP'IN TO THI rUILIC
50°/o OFF
l'lltne Ill-.... Publ•~ l>lnft (0911 Olll-Plkl! ·-==============·1 "'"di s. .. it71 m -11 j_ -'----"c'c'-'c'c'_'_"_'_"c'c'c" ___ 1
' • "
prev)ous record for the month
established in 1965." Noting
that demand was particularly
strong for Oldsmobile's full
size cars, Bu1:ton reported
that durinf the sales period
February 21·28 sales included
14,763 Delta 88'1, 98's and
Toronadol and even 10,000
FBS's.
Money's Worth
Victim of Burglars?
Heed These Warnings
By SYLVIA PORTER
11• ctlltblrl!"" 'lflltt 1fle
lllHtrcll tn1t11uto ti Allllf"ln.J
If you arl! among the
millions o! Americans wbo!C
homes were burglarized dur·
ing '70, heed these warnings
as you prepare to claim a
casualty Joss deduction for the
uninsured portion of yoor theft
Joss over $100.
Say a thief stole cash and
jewels. You are supposed to
be able to prove bow much
cash he took in order to deduct
that loss. But just try proving
to yourself exactly how much
cash was in your house on
any one day; or proving the
precise cost of jewels you
bought or were given as gifts
many years ago.
One taxpayer claimed that
a burglar stole $433.87 in cash
plus an engagement ring, wed·
ding band anC:. TV set costing
$1,055, a total theft o f
$2,488.87. Less the $100 deduc·
tible for nonbusiness casualty
loss, he tookd a $1,388.87
casualty loss deduction. The
examining agent disallowed
the entire amount for la ck
of proof and the taxpayer went
to the Tax Court. There. a
sympathetic judge permitted
a deduction of $1,108.87: the
$433.87 claimed in cash and
a $775 loss on the rest. less
the $100 deductible, in contrast
lo the zero allowed by the
IRS agent.
So. ir you have been hit
by a major thert and an IRS
examiner bars your itemized
casualty loss deduction
because you can't prove your
figures on the cash in your
stolen \Yallet or the value of
your stolen possessions, think
seriously about going to court.
If you suffer a casualty loss
from an uninsured auto ac-
cident. a misappropriation,
etc., you may be inclined to
start a lawsuit at once against
\Yhoever caused your loss, ·
even though your odds on col·
lecting are slight. This may
be particularly so ir a lawyer
is willing to take your case
on a contingent fee basis.
both the Treasury. and the
Tax Court take the view lhal
a '·reasonable prospect" exists
as long as your lawsuit is
pending -no matter how
smaU your chances of col·
lecting. Thus, if your case
dragged on for years, you'd
be unable to take your deduc·
tion until it was ofliciaUy set·
tied in some way.
If you 're stuck with this
situation, my good ~ws for
yoo is that two courts last
year took a more liberal view.
The Third Circuit anc1 tbe
Court or Claims 'A·on't flatly
bar your casualty loss·deduc.
tion just because your lawsuit
is pending; instead they will
evaluate your prospects of
recovery. And if you do not
have a "reasonable prospect"
of recovery, you may take
your casualty loss deduction.
even though you arc still suing
to collect from the -party who
injured you.
If you have lost trees
because of improper grading
of the land around your house.
you cannot deduct this as a
casualty loss. The Tax Court
ruled last year that trees are
suffocated gradually by the
improper grading -aod thus ,
there Is not the sudden oc-
currence which is required for
a casualty loss.
But what aboUt the need
for a sudden occurrence? This
you must have , as a Treasury
ruling in a 1970 case involving
the right to deduct damages
resulting from• an exploding
water heater again underlined.
Because of norma~ deteriora·
lion from t'Ullt and corrosion
the heater had burst and caus'.
ed ru st and water damage
to the taxpayer's rugs, carpets
and drapes.
The Treasury permitted him
to take a casualty loss deduc-
tion for the damage to these
furnishings, because this was
caused by a sudden iden-
tificable event -the exPloding
of the healer.
But the burst healer itself
does not qualify as a deduc·
lible casualty Joss because the
blowup resulted front a
gradual, progress ive process
of rusting and corrosion. The
distinctions art clear.
eerore you do this, though,
consider the possible impact r-----------. or the lawsuit on your right
to take a casualty loss deduc-
tion on your tax return, The
tax law says you can't take
a casualty loss deduotion as
long as a "re3sbnalhe pro:
specf' ror recovery exists and
Newport Man
Heads Truckers
li. A. (l!obie) Smith has
been named general sales
ma nager for Smith Tool Com-
pany. it was announced today
by Dale Boyer, president, at
the Compton headquarters or
1he oil tool rirm .
Smilh wu previously
domesUc sales manaicer for
petroleum markets in the U .S
and Canada. He p,•iU now head
up all aspect! of sales, in-
cluding petroleum, and mining
and industrial products ror
bo{h fottlgn and domestic
rnarkets.
Ii. A. Smith lives "'ith his
'tl'trc . Jacqueline. ancl children.
TAmara. Crn lr. ITTld Tr:ict. nt
1918 Galaxy DriYe, !\'ewport
Beecll.
TAX CLASSES
SCHEDULED
Federal Income Ta x
deadlin is April 15 and
Orange Coast College is
offering ~ three-part ser·
ies oo ta1 preparation to
help tht harried taxpayer:
Richard A. Brown of
Newport Beach, a tax
lawyer, will lead tbe lec-
ture series which began
Wednesday and continues
on t"-o succeeding Wed-
nesdays In Costa Afesa
High S<bool.
Lectures "·ill c o v e r
ways to save money on
income taxes, how to pre-
pare forms. "'hich in-
comes arc taxab}e and
""'hich arc not and the
rnany deductions that may
be taken legally.
The rourse u·fn bt held .....
In the high school caf'lter-
ln . There is no fffl. Reg.
ls.trnflcn mi'" bi-coin·
pitted at the first lecture.
Finance
Briefs
NEW YORK -Combustion
Engln,.rlng. Inc., has ob-
tained a f1 million order for
a 660-megawatt cycling boiler
-J)OS.1ihly to be the world 's
larges~ from Potomac Elec-
tric Power Co. The cycling
boiler is a quick startup and
peak load oil·fired steam
generator. The unit will pro-
duce 4.6 million pounds of
steam bcwrly and will be In-
stalled at the Chalk Point,
Md., station.
OAKLAND, Calif. -World
Airways, 111c.. has ordered
three DCI Super 63 series
aircraft from 1t1cDonne11
Douglas Corp. The big plane,
with capacities of 2 5 o
passengers will cost • total
of about $40 million and will
give World Airway! a fleet
of craft with passenger
capacities ranging from 250
down to 40 for charter parties.
CHICAGO -The Mid.,.;i
Stock Exchange C lfe a r i n g
Corp., has announced a ew
securities delivery s y s le m
between New York and
Chicago that it says can cut
days from the full business
week normally required to
deliver securities between the
two cities. About S6 billion
worth of stocks and bonds
are moved between the na·
lion's two largest c I ti e s
yearly.
SAN FRANCISCO -Levi
Strauss & Co., famous maker
of Western Style Jeans, is
making its first offering of
stock to the public. A group
led by Lehman Bros. offered
1.27 million shares or Levi
Strauss at $47, with an ad·
ditional 126,000 shares being
offered at the same price by
certain stockhOlders. Th e
company has started during
the 1849 California gold rush
by Levi Strauss, an itinerant
tailor •
MILWAUKEE -A.
Krueger Co. has obtained . a
contract to print the Journal
of the American Medical ~
sociation, a class weekly with
a circulation of 250,000,
starting Sept. t. Krueger
would not reveal the terms
but aaid it would rulize more
than $25 million in gross
revenues from the contract.
The journal will be printed
in offset by Krueger. -
HOUSTON -Humblt Oil
& Refining Co. said it wiU
spend sever~l miUlon doTiara
at its Baton Rouge, La.,
refiner)' to increase capacity
to refine asphaltic crude from
the Hawkins Field in Wood
County, Te1as.
NEW YORK -COioniai
Penn Group, lnc., has an-
nounced a two-for-one stock
split and raised lhe semi·an·
nual dividend to the equivalent
of 40 cents a share before
the split from the recent rate
of 25 cents.
NEW YORK -Tbt French
Line announced it bas agreed
to buy cruise liner Bergensf·
jord from the Norwegian.
American line as a replace-
ment for the cruise liner S.
E. Antilles. It will bt used
in Caribbean and European
waters and will call at U.S.
ports.
WASHINtTON -Marriott
Corp. has announced a 2.5
percent stock dividend payable
May 21 to holden or record
March 19. The stock dividend
i.!I calculated to bt equivalent
to a total cash dividend of
$11.9 million at market value.
MILWAUKEE -Falk Corp.
a subsidiary or Sundstrand
Corp., announced Thursday it
will shift from open·hearth
melting furnaces to eleetric
arc melting in making steel
castings to reduce air pollu-
tion. The conversion wiU cost
13 million.
Seal Beach
Man In Post
At Philco
A·Seal .Btaeh man ha~ been
named controller of Phu~
Ford's Aeronutronic Division
in Newport Beach.
John L. Dampman, formerly
manger of the Prof!. Planning
and Analysis office. succeeds
Robert S, Rennard in the top
financial post, according to
Louis F. He ilig, vtce president
and general manager.
Rennard has accepted a
position on the staff of Ford
Motor Company in Dearborn,
Illich., Heilig said.
Dampman, a native of
LansdoWne, Pa., ·fo I n e d
Aeronutronlc in 1964 as a
flnanclal analy11t in the con·
troller's office and subse·
quently has held ~everJl
supervl!ory and mnnagement
positions within that oUice •
\
Who Liste.1s
To Landers?
SINCE
SHE'S
ONE
OF
THE
TEN
MOST
INFLUENTIAL
WOMEN
IN
AMERICA • • •
• • • Just
About
Everyone
..
Does
That's Mo
· ..
' I
.... i
J
. ,•
• ' l
' • ' ·' , . ..
"
• I
: f~ .,,.; ~·
•
i
You Cen 'Listen' to Ann Lenders
De ily '"
' ,
.,
' •.
'
i
·,
j •
.. .
... -~·•
I
'
. . . •• " , . . .
Buy The DAILY PILOT For Peanuts!
Hert'• here'• he rt'• 'Flert1•.
CHARLIE BROWN ••• and LUCY •• , and UNUS ... and VIOLET ••• and
ht1'9'•
SCHROEDER ••• and
lelt but not IMat,
here't
SNOOPY
Phone 642-4321 (Circulation Department) to have the
whole Peanuts gang come and visit you dally.
I
I
-
I
I
, ......... ~., ........... .
%% DAllY PILOT
Russians
Paying
For Cuba
By PHIL NEWSOM
VPI Fortlp Newt Analyst
The Russians are paying
plenty for their L a t l n
American foothold in CUba.
In Moscow, al the end of
February, the Soviets and the
Cubans signed their aimua1
trade agreement in
ceremorUes at which Mikhail
Kuzmin. a' first deputy
minister of Soviet foreign
trade, said that 1971 would
eee an increase of $110 million
in the value of Russi.an goods
sent to· CUba.
Soviet aid has bee1 keeping
the Cuban economy afloat for
the last 10 yean, and the
Cubans now ere estimated to
owe the Russians more than
$3 billion exclusive of military
aid.
With the Cuban economy
going deeper into the hole
each year, the Russians can
have but little hope of ever
beillg repaid.
And the logical question is
bow Jong will the Russians
continue a policy which seems
to be one ol ever-dlminishing
returns.
In a nuclear war between
the United States aftd the
Soviet Union, Cuba's value to
the Russiw w o u I d be
dubious.
But, since Latin America
lt regarded by many as the
next great arta of cold war
amflict between the United
Stal.es and the Soviet Union,
Its peacetime value or its
value i• case of conventional
warfare ls enormous.
lt gives the Russians a
hiendly port where no other
exists.
It can provide the Soviet
Navy with food and facilities
for shore leave and repairs.
It could interfere with ship-
ping through the Panama
Canal and threaten the canal
Itself. It also JX>Uld pose a
threat to shippiilg movlnst out
of the mouth or the Missis·
1ippi River.
Further. it has the prestige
l'alue of providing t h e
Russians a haven in waters
beretofore ex c l us l vel y
American. ~ for the Cuban people
themselves, even Fidel Castro
admits the immediate future
ts not bright.
Rationing which began in
1962 has become even tighter .
Cigan and cigarets were put
on the rationing list last year
for the first time.
For Cuba's Ills, Castro has
the diagnosis but not the cure.
In speeches he has blamed
the country's plight first of
all on high absenteeism and
low labor productivity.
In a speech last July, he
declared:
" .. neither thi s nation's
tco111omy, nor that of any other
nation can tolerate the cor·
rosive, demo'ralizinfi!: a n d
disruptive actions or 400,000
shirkers."
Such a figure w o u 1 d
represent 20 percent or Cuba's
labor force.
At another time, he said:
" ... productivity has been
practically forgotten, and the
lack of It is a bottomless
_pit that can~wallow all of
the countty's 'human
resources."
At one point he took to
task workers who took warn·
Jngs on the heallh hazards
of smoking M a, reason to
neR:lect the tob'cco crop.
Sugar remains Cuba's chief
money eamer. Last year
Castro ureued for a cron of
~lo million tons but fell a
mlllJon and a half tons short
despite drawing off wor'Kers
from industry and all other
forms of Cuban enterorise.
'Mlis year he has told Cuban
worters the aop must come
to seven million tons. It ac-
tually ts erpect.ed to come
to no more than five or six.
Check the Most
. . . ....
Monday, Marth B, lfl71
Prices Effective
3/7 th.ru 3/9/71
Sears
T.lre and Auto Center
GRAND PRIX
•
MARCH 28, 1971 at . cs:::>
Ontario Motor Speedway
SPECIAL SEARS DISCOUNTS-
.....
l>loeo11nt
Prieto
'14 •12 •10
'11 '9 '7
SEARS FAMILY DISCOUNT PLAN
Buy Any Ticket I[ ReAul1r Price ... Ger Addi1ion1I Ti(kcrs
(of similar vaJuc:) for ONLY S3 for each Ch ild 16 ycan or..:
Under.
Pick Up Your Oi1COUn1 Coupons At Any Scan Au m Cc:nccr And Gf:t
Tickc:u at the Tickcuon Ouile1 Ac Cus(omcr C.Onvcnicnce Co\ln(Ct.
. . . . . . . .
• •
.
TUBELESS
WHITEWALL
SIZE Tnide·ln
Plir"
175.13 S36
1115-IA· . S41
195-14 54-1
20.';. J.I $49
215.14 55.,
19ii·l5 $41
205-15 $53
215-15
225-15
• Popular New
Column Alive •..
'Checking Up ''
••••• •
IUINI PAllt T,t, l ·••OO. $,1.41110 ll M0""1 GI ·, •• ,fl
C.l.HOOA •All( 344-0UI GUNDALI CM 5•1004. (I 4·•111
(OM"OM Ht 1°1111, NI 2•1111 t101,'l'WOOD HO 9.Jt•I
su.u,aouua::ANDCO. COYl"A ftl-Gll1 IHOllWOOD Ol 1·1121
lhofi NJPl.1 ..._.. ('• t1ao A.Mi to 9:30 P.M., Sundor I l Noon to .s P.M.
' ' I t
. . . ' " .. I • • : ' . ' . . ".
•
WIDE GUARD
2 Fiberglass Belts Plus 2 Nylon Plies
'' !·
36-Month Guarantee ·
Regular Trade-in
Price '28.95
•
•
6.50xl3/C78-13 .
Tubeless Blackwall . ~'
Plus S2 F.E.T.
And Old Tire
.11 ... 1 .. ... ..... ,.,.: .... ' SJZE T...0..111 ........ SIZE ~...i..1;· r~ ..... i. f. .. ..... ,....... F.E.T. tPrl .. . '"• .l..T •
TUBELESS BLACKWALL TUBELESS WHITEWALL ·
6.50xl3/C7S.13 28.95 21.71 2.00 7.35xl4/E7S.14 35.95 26.96 2.37
7.75x14/F7S.14 33.95 25.46 2.54 7.75x14/F7S.14 37.95 28.46 2.54
36.95 27.71 2.69 8.25xl4/G7S.14 40.95 30.71 2.69
37.95 28.46 2.80 8.55xl4/H7S.14 43.95 32. 2.95
Ask About Sean 8.85xl4/J7S.141 46.95 35.21 3.05
Conuenient 8.25xl5/G7S.15 41.95· 31.46 ~.8(1
Cr<dii PlalU 8.55xl5/H7S.15 44.95 33.11 3.0!'
SAVE 25% On A,ny Size Listed
Superwide "70"
36-Month Guarantee
Regular $37.95
Trade-In
Price
:! Polynter Plif'I
Plot 2 Fiberglass Belts
7.35xl4/E70.14
Tobe le.
Whilew1ll
.Plu1 2.51 F.E.T.
AndOldTir.
• Widest tire we sell ••• with bold, low profile and
Fiber Glass Hells
•For superior traction and long mileage
ALLSTATE PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE
1:..,•r•nr~~,1 Apirot: All 1ire fulurft from nnrm•l
ro.ad bnard1 or def«IJ in ma1eri1I or workmtn•lup
t'nr How l..on1: Fur 11M: life of the ori11n1l rrcaJ
,,;1ha1 S.-1n Will Do: In '2thlll'l,l:e for 1he ,;..,, rfpl.ce
ii, chor111.u\( onlr for 1he propo"ion of (11tttn1 xllina
prier plui f~ b iM Tu 111M rcprt:Knu tre-d wr
Rrpair n11J JlllllCll!n"I •no dw:l'C
Sears Steel Belted Radials
2 Steel Belts Plus Rayon Cord Plies ....
•Tread reinforced with 2
steel belts, virtually eli·
minating all tyPes or
road hazards
• Rayon cord plies pro-
vide smooth1secure ride
•Tread lifetime plus 4-0.
000 mile tread wear-.o~i
guarantee
' I '
•
175-13 Tubelett Whi1ew1ll
Plus I,94F.E.T.AndO!dT;r. .._. ....................... ___________ _
SEARS ALLSTATE RADIAL PASSENGER TIRE GUARANTEE
lOHG MACH Hf l ·D111
Ol'l'MJl'IC & IOIO AN l ·Jllt
0..1.NGI •27·1100
l'&l &OIN& •&1 ·J211, 351 ·42 11
l'CMOHA HA f ·Sl61
l'ICO WI l-.4121J
IANJA ANA Ill 7'.J27t
l&NTA " ll'lllNO• M4•tol 1
Iii.NT.I. MOHi<& Ill 4·1111
ICUl'N COAST PLAIA 1404232
I
I
JHOUIAtftl OAU •t7'-.41JW
TOUANCI a•J•ll11
u..u..-•11-1•21
VAU."' PO 1·1461, •M·212D
VlkMONf ft ••tf l I
•
1
. -
onight's the Night:
Bypass Could
Also Happen
For Rose Bowl
What happened between San Fernando
Valley State College and the NCAA could
well transpire someday in selecting
teams for the Rose Bowl.
It seemed appalling to some initially,
including this writer, when the an-
nouncement was made that San Fernan--
do Valley State was being snubbed for
a berth in the NCAA basketball playoffs
(college division ).
The shocking part of that bit of news
'
' OLENN WHIT•
-------· WHITE
WASH ---
was that Cal Poly of San Luis Obispo
is going to the playoffs. Cal Poly finished
second to SFVS in the circuit derby.
Follows Tradition
Uncle Sam' s,N ephew
Captures . Doral-Open
MIAMI (AP) -"Gotta get me some
tomato cans,'' grinned Carlyle Snead.
It's a family tradition.
Straw·hatled Sam Snead has long been
known as the Jack Benny of pro go lf.
a drawling miser who stuffed his millions
into tomato cans and buried them.
That was yesteryear.
Slammin' Sam is (ast becoming known
as Cracklin' Carlyle's uncle.
Nephew Carlyle shot a windup 69 Sun-
day to win the Doral Open's top prize
of $30,000. Two weeks earlier the 29-year-
old upstart took the Tucson Open and
$22.000.
Sam?
He tied for Slst at windwhipped Doral
Country Club and tried not to spend
his $214.29 In one place.
"Uncle Sam really isn't cheap,'' said
Suzie Snead, shapely blonde wife of the
' golf tour's newest hero. 0 People used
to order drinks and Sam got stuck with
the check, He just got smart, that's
all ."
The elder Snead, still swinging sweet
at age 58, was packed and gone when
nephew Carlyle marched home a winner
in the $150,000 tournament.
"He gave me some advice," said
Carlyle of Sam, "But it's something
you can't print."
Most of Sam's advice is that way,
they say.
Carlyle, onetime $500-a-month minor
league baseball player, had rounds of
70-70-6IH9, a 13-under-par 275 on the
not-so-monslrous Blue Monster coorse
at Doral.
Slim, cool Gardner Dickinson rolled
In a seven-foot birdie putt just ahead
of Snead on the fabled 437-yard 18th
hole. It made Carlyle get a par to
win by one over Dickinson's 276.
As Snead lined up his approach to
the final green, a clown in the bleachers
yelled. "Miss it." NCAA reasoning was that San Fernan·
do's 14·12 reco rd wasn 't worthy of a
playoff spot. Cal Poly's 16·12 mark and
a season split in games with srvs
got the former into the eliminations.
You may not have been aware th~a~l ______ _
the reason the Pacific·8 and Big 10
conferences vote as to which of their
teams will play in the annual Rose
Bowl football classic is because the
champion is not automatically the
q.rlyle said, "I'm shooting for $30,000
and some guy is ye lling for me lo
miss it. It made me hot and I said
to myself, 'l"m gonna show you.' "
_ He did. too.
Snead rapped the shot within 12 fett
of the cup, rimmed out his birdie putt
and flicked in a two-incher for the vie·
tory.
qua lifier.
Both loops have regulations that say
the most representative team or con-
ference champion will play in the Rose
Bowl.
However. since the pact began with
the \!H7 duel between Illinois and UCLA,
neither side has failed to send its cham-
pion or leading eligible qualifier.
We must 'l>oint out the latter because
I.he Big 10 has its jackass ruling that
no team may appear in the Rose Bowl
on successive years. thus the reason
for ha ving it:s runnerup in Pasadena
on assorted occasions.
* * * The Angels ' decision to play the Tokyo
Orlons A1arch 31 eurely sbould be weU
recelv~ by ba1eball lovqs lo end oeer
Orange County,
Fl"•I l<O!"et •nd -'f W1,.,.,1"95 In ~ 1150.000
Dor11 C»en ODii IO\l•nlmetl!:
J. c S!\ffd. U0.000 G1r~ Olcll~. 117.000
Miiier 81roer, 510,.6JO
Glbb'f GHO.tt, t1.tl0
Arvt• Flelt.dter, U,•SO
l ruc• Oevlin. U.61
Tl'l"ry Oolt, \J,..SO
Mlllt Hiii. ,...,'2l
J•ct Hlct .. ~. 1•.GSO
HOmt"> 8llnce1, 1),1511
0.Vt Hlll, '3.lOO
Oevt SIOCklO<l. IJ,lQO °'""• Eldl<ltbtl'11•\ n.ilS Ton'f Jectlln, IJ.loJS
llott11y Mlle.MU, 1;.1o)5
Hitbe•I GrMn, 1t.•1s
g:;:~' ·"';j~"':.:.o~r·o1s
llob Lllllfl, SI.OU P~ll R<1oeri1. 11,015
llDUO S.nd1r1. Sl ,l~
0..n 51kH, 11.:U.
Teid H1v-1, 11,ll•
kt<"m1t Z~•le'f, 1!,lii
Tcwn $1\l!w, 11,J;•
Gtnt Ll!l\e•. 11,:Ui
F•1nll 1.,.,0, 11,lS•
Orvlli. MOoOy. Sl,GOO JOlltt Mllllr, 11.000
Jim J1mlel4J'I, 11.000
A'l'IOld l"'t!lfltf", (1,000
lobtty Hoch0l1, Jl.000 G1y ,,,,..,, 11.000
10-~215
'6-IO--H""'-211 ,...,....._m
tf.1M11·11-17t
n-11.n~•
n-JMt-ttO n·"*"-* , .. ,._.,..._,.. ,, ..... ,_,)-212
•t..IJ..10-1'--lt1
11·11·11·70-lll
71'*'·1>-~•J ... 1~ft#IJ-l(• n-11-n• ,,,,...,.,,_,.,
1).10--n-4t-21• , .. ,s.11.1J.-.11s
111-11·11·1J.-215
1:i.n47-7l-HS
11· 11·11·11-ll.S
11-19·11·1'-2111 , ... , .... 75-2"
••·10-11·1'-2" n-13·'~''-:rlli 1'""11_.,.n-1M
IJ.n-1•·11-'116
1•1M~n-216
ll-ff.'1·16-211 ""''·~11-211 1}71·11·'1-:117 7J1"-1'-71-J11
•t..12.1s.n-•1 ,,.,,.,,.,._,.,
DAILY Pl,OT %3
Clash of Champion·s
Clay, Frazier Collide at Garden;
To Perform for $2.5 Million Each
NEW YORK (AP) -"He's a loud-
mouth, he's a nut. he appeals to fools
-I will be1t him Wide of ten round!,"
says Joe Frazier.
' "He 's just a homemade champion, an
amateur, ugly and awkward -it will
be. no contest, I will win ,'' boasts Muham-
mad Ali .
With these biUu broadsides, Frnier,
the grim buzwaw alugg~. and Ali, the
arrogant aod 1arrulous craftsman~ plug·
ged their verbal canMn and awaited
the bell tonight at Madison Square
Glrden for the . projttted $30 million,
unparalleled aports spectacle that w 11 1
decide the undi.spuled king of the
heavyweight!. ·
Las Vegas has made Frazier, the bull,
a 6-5 favorite. British bookmakers,
renect.lng AU's overseas popularity, rate
Muhammad lhe Matador an 11 to I
edge.
The most realistic appraisal apparently
Is offered by Jimmy tt'J'he Greek''
Snyder. the nation'• unofficial Wizard
of Odds, who calla it an even ''pick
'em'' fight.
Without all I.he accompanying folderol,
the fight is a natural in its own right,
matching a brawling, bore-in sledgeham-
mer slugger against a nimble-footed,
lightning-quick bo:rer who "floats like
a butterfly and stings like a bee.''
Both men have revealed their battle
plans, which surprised no one.
"He's no scientific champion like me,"
said Ali. "He will hardly touch me.
When he gel!! close -POW, POW,
POW -I'll let him have it. Nobody
hits me hard. If a man touches my
face, it worries me."
"He can have his fa ce." countered
Frazier, a tough , one time slaughterhouse
butcher. "I'm going to work on his
body. If you kil l the body, the head
will die."
Ali, at 29, is two years older thi:n
Frazier. He towers fi..foot-3 to Frazier's
5--1 I~ and has a 6~-inch edge on reach.
"No little man like that can beat
me.'' Ali insists.
Although he never has bttn regarded
as a strong puncher, Ali 's knockout
record is as awesome as that of Frazier.
Ali has 25 knockouts in his string
of 31 straight professional victories.
Fratier, in winning 26 fighl!I, has knocked
out 23 foes.
All likes to point to the case of two
common foes. He slopped Jerry Quarry
in three rounda while Frazier needed
seven .
He stopped Argentina's tough Osca r
Bonavena in the 15th round while
Bonavena twice went t h e limit with
Frazier, knock.lng the Philadelphian down
twice in one round in their first bout.
Ali, born Cassius Marcellus Clay, 1.
1960 Olympie light-heavyweight champion
and the grandson of a runaway Kentucky
slave, had won 29 straight fights before
he refused military service In April 1967,
thus losi ng his tltle without ever pulling
on a glove.
After 43 month.!! of court fights and
ring inactivity, he made his comeback
by stopping Jerry Quarry in Atlanta
Oct. 28, 1970. He beat Bonavena last
Dec. 7 at the Garden.
Frazier is one of 13 children of a
Beaufort, S.C., sharecropper. He ned
the South lo Philadelphia, where l1e grew
up in a ghetto. There he fell under
the influence of Yancey Durham , his
present manager.
After winning the Olympic heavyweight
crown in Rome in 1964, he turned pro,
startin' his career in Philadelphia Aug.
Veterans Groups
Protest Against
Title Fight
MANCHESTER, N. H. (UPI)
Veterans groups appealed to New
Hampshire residents toda)' to fl y flags
at ha lf staff In memory of American
war dead as part of 1. protest against
tonight'• world heavyweight title bout
between Cassius Clay and Joe Frazier.
Members of the Veterans of Foreign
Wars, American Legion and Disabled
American Veterans, objecting, to Clay's
refusal to serve In the armed forces,
also planned to picket a closed-circuit
telecast of the fight at the state armory
here.
Gov . Walter Peterson earlier turned
down a requt11t to cancel the contract
for the showing after attorney general
Warren Rudman said the contract was
valid r.nd could not be canceled without
the threat of a court injunction.
Former Gov. Wesley Powell accused
Rudman of putting a ''dollar sign on
patriotism and honor."
18, 1965. He was declared heavyweight
champion in seven states after beating
Buster Mathis Marth 4, 1968.
He gained universal recognition by
atopping Jimmy Ellis, Ali 's old sparrln&
partner, in the fifth round Feb. 16,
1970, at the Garden.
For All, who has be<.'Ome a symbol
of reaistance to the unpopular Vietnam
war, this fight is a crusade.
''This is the biggest event ln history
-It compares to ... walk on the
moon," he said. "I'm the champ of
the world. When I'm out there fighting,
rm thinking of the freedom .of my
people."
Frazier, saying he has no social ax
to grind, charged that Ali's bombasts
are the result of fear. "He is nervous,
he's scared,'' Frazier said. "He's all
psyched up. I'm afraid he'll have a
heart attack before t.ht fight comes vU.
I like him, but be·s cruy."
MRS. FLORENCE FRAZIER, DAUGHTER, WAIT FOR START OF FIGHT.
Sports in Brief
AndrettiBecomes Threat
For World Driving Title
JOHANNESBURG, South Africa -
This promises to be the Year of the
Ferarrl in Formula One, based on the
perfonnance of the blood red cars In
the first cha mpi011ship race or 1971.
It coold also be something even rarer
in Grand Prix rompetition -the year
of a driving champion from the United
States.
A steady performance by Mario
Andretti of Nazareth, Pa., won Ferrari
the South African Grand Prix at Kyalami
circuit Saturday.
The victory gave Andrettl, :u, ~i:-ie
points toward the driver's title. The
only other U.S. competitor ever to ~·in
the Grand Prix driving crown "'as
Californian Phil Hiii In a Ferrari in
1961.
Ferrari drivers Jacky lckx of Beli;iium
and Ital ian-Swiss Gianclaudio "Clay"
Regazzoni finished second and third, in
the 1970 driving competition .
Regauonl finished an impressive third
Satur,day and lckx wound up eighth.
Scotland's Jackie Stewart, a pre-race
favorite after he clipped more than !wo
seconds off lhe lap record of l minute
20.2 seconds in practice wrested the
runnerup spot from Regazzoni.
•
PALM SPRING~ -Trades !}ave mad e
the c!'allfornia Angels potenlls.lly a great
baseball team and the swap with the
most latent punch seems to be making
noises already, with spring training
camps open barely a week.
Jim Maloney, the-big muscular right-
hander who had arm troubles a year
ago with ClncinnaU. made his first show·
ing as an Angel a brilliant one Sunday,
allow ing just one hit in three innings
of work.
-The CAllfomian.s took it on I.he chin
7-5 from the Chicago Cubs but the work
of Maloney was most pleasing to
manager Lefty Phillips.
•
lNGLEWOOD -Will Chamberlain
sank 20 points and dominated the boards
fof a season high 32 rebounds Sunday
night as the Los Angeles Lake.rs won
first game since the loss of Jerry West
by coming from behind to defeat the
Chicago Bulls, 117-108.
The crippled Lake.rs had trailed 71~2
wilh 8:45 to go in the third period
before turning the game around .
In addition lo Chamberlain's re-
bounding, Gail Goodrich returned after
missing two games due to exhaustion
to pour in 23 points and contribute a
season high of 13 assists.
•
NEW YORK -Ted Irvine ripped thret
third·period goals, rallying the New York
Rangers to a 4-2 National Hockey League
victory over the Los Angeles Kings Sun-
day night.
The triumph e:rtended New York's
unbeaten streak to eight games but the
Rangers 'bad to come from behind to
get it. •
RICHMOND. Va. -Richard Petty
usually starts NASCA& Grand Natlonal
stock car races from ~lhe pole position •
nr near the front of the pack, but
any nolion he couldn't win when he
had to start dead last has been scotched.
The 34-year-old Randleman, N.C.,
driver was relegated to 30th position
in a. 3<kar Richmond 500 field Sunday
because of a minor engine rules in·
fraction that prevented his qualifyii;ig.
It took him 30 laps to move ·lo fifth
posiUon in the 1971 Plymouth and by
the a.14th circuit in ~ 500 laP event,
Petty had grabbed the lead. It's 1 chance lo see Japanele basehall
player1, It's one of the Halos' final
1uneupt. before the major league races
open. Aad, it'1 a benefll 1ame for l\11nnie
Rojaa •.
lle1s the ti-Halo pitcher, who suffered
paralysis and lost lwo of hl1 cbildrta
ht an automobile accident.
Br·uin-USC Showdown Saturday
Wltii Orange County'1 heavy Japanese
populace plu1 wlde1pread lntere1t In
Japanese baseball. better get your tickets
early-It sholl.ld drew a beckuva crowd,
* * Ex-Newport Harbor High coach Dave
Waxman guided San Jose State College's
frosh basketball team to an 11-9 record
!hi, ~eaSon.
Waxman ma y be in line for the head
1 ~'). which recently became vAcar11.
I
DORAL WINNER J. C. SNEAD
LOS ANGELF..S (AP J -Ira generally
agreed by the experts -the coaches
of the UCLA and Southern Cal basketball
tea.ms -that Saturday afternoon'•
8ruin.Trojan clash could be.won 1ft
the foul line.
UCLA 's John Wooden and USC's Bob
Boyd both 11dmllled earlier in the season
that tr the Trojans get in foul trouble
-especially at center -the. Bruins
could win in a wa lk. And if the Bruin~
get · in roul trouble, USC's great depth
wlll k!U ~ nation's top-ranked team.
Both won a pair of weekend games
1g1\nst California and Stanford and the
tale of the whistle may be significant.
The ·Bruins MemOl~-C.I. 103"'9 a"nd
·Stanford 107·72, commiUing 30 foul! in
the two games. USC ripped Stanford,
&1-7• and beat Cal 96-11, being charged
with 43 personals.
More importar1t, however, was where
the fouls went.' In each game, \JCl.A't
lnc redlbly mobile 6-foot.a Sidney Wick!
had one roul . blocking &hola a1 he went. with rour fouls. That may be Utt key
And in each game, USC's wiry, agile to Saturday's game.
Ron Riley picked up four, one from Else.where, the Pac.a season comu
e:rpulsion, • • -.. ~to ~a close ~ith, fapfart. since ror Ul•
lt'r'l\i1ey's rebounding t!Wt kept the Ws.shlngton and Oregon 1chools, 11·1
Trojans comfortably 1 head In rlyalry weekend .
both weekend games. He had a total of Friday night, Washington State tr1vels
24 rebounds and must get somewhere to Seattle for the final game of the
over IS against the Bruin~ If USC hopes i;eason. Washington, tough Rt home thli
to win. year. dropped a disappointing 90-79 g.ame
Bu! rebounding Is An agresslve act at Pullman lo the COOgars earUer and
and • playtr can't be as aggressive must he; accorded the edge.
'
•
•
tl
f4 DAILY PILOT MOlld•r, Mmh 8, 1971
STEVE BROOKS
Huntington Bt1ch
CRAIG ANDERSON'
Sin Clement•
GARY ORGILL
E1t1nci1
BRUCE MILLER
Marini
JOHN KAZMER
Newport H1rbor
JIM STEPHENS
Marina
Brooks Heads Coa~t Five
Marina's Stephens Named Coach of Year
Huntington Beach High's jlJilior center
Steve Brooks heads the 1971 all-Orange
Coast area basketball team as selected
by the DAILY PILOT.
Brooks was lauded as player-of-the-
year while coach-of-the-year honors went
to Marina's Jim Stephens.
The Oiler junior produced points at
a 21.l per &•me clip and was joined
on the first team by Newport Harbor's
John Kanner, Estanc.ia's Gary Orgill,
Craig Anderson of San C1emenle and
Marina's Bruce P.tiller.
Brooks and Miller helped lead their
teams to shares of the Sunset League
tiUe while Oriill (%2.4) paced the area
in scorln:g and Kazmer wa1 Newport's
most cmisistent performer.
Anderson managed to average 14 .I
despite the 'fact that he was plagued
by injuries and assorted illnesses
lhrougboot the campaign.
In addiUon to ~ka and Miller, four
Anteaters Bid
For 9th in Row
lgainst USC
Dennis Nicholson (2-0J will lake the
mound against the USC Trojans Tuesday
afternoon at Bovard Fleld on the SC
campus as coach Gary Adams' UC Irvine
basebaU team attempts to win its ninth
straight decision .
The game will be the first or two
with the highly regarded Trojans of
Rod Dedeaux, def-ending NCAA university
division champion. The second encounter
will be played Friday afternoon on the
UCI diamond.
Saturday afternoon the Anteaters ran
their season record to I l·t with a pair
of seven inning victories over invading
Occidental College.
Tom O'Connor (3--0) was the winner
In the opener in a relief role , S.3,
while Bob Barlow hurled six innings
of the nightcap to gain his second victory
of the year with last inning help from
fireman Greg Penningtoo, ~20.
Tom Dodd , slarte r in the Hrst game.
ran Into trouble in tht third inning
after getting the first ty,·o outs. An
error put a man on base and three
singles and a double brought three runs
across before O'Connor came on.
UCI had opened in front y,•hen Bobby
FarTar walkedr stole second. went tG
third on a bad throw by the catcher
and scored on a single by r-.1ike Sykora.
,.lltlT G ... MI!
Occllllllttl {II V( lrvl~ (•)
WlllllOll, Jll
C1Mry, •~
N11MM, Cl Sent-, Ill
llflDlet", lb 1"rottw, II ...... " 8111!0, c L•,,_' -
»rllrttl •b r hr" ,a 1 0 0 F•rt•t, II l 1 O O
Jllt l yko••,>D Jl''
:t1tt <:r119,ct Jl l O
•111 s-1,1n 11 11
•llO kMni.P' 0000
J I t I M•Unot!. ID D 0 0 0
Jltt~tt.•,rf Jl 'I
l l -llH..,1..,,•1 1 01 1
1 011CortoMCICl.11110 11
5MllM, c l ••• Dlldd,P 111 0
O'C-. 0 J I I I
P"'"lllOIWI. P 0 0 0 D
2' I I , TIM•ll 1• • t
k • ... ., 1-1 ... 1 ' . . OllJtoO t -J•1
111 tit•-• t I
5«COfo!D 0.tlMI
C)(cl•.,.1•1 U I UC lniwl Iii
•t t II rtll ... ,"~
WIN"°"" 1b ' . ' . F1rrtr, ' • ' ' . ,...,.,,.., u J ••• s_...r, H • • •• Ntfttll, cl ' . ' • 51'!<0<"1, • ' ••• ~,ID , 0 • 0 """· ,. • ••• e::~ .. •••• '"""" d ' • • • ' ' • • Mt llrwtf, tt • ' ' ' T-· • ' ' ' 5111<.1. rt ' ' • ' ~11.•t ' 0 • • H•,,_, P ' • • • ..,.,., < ' . ' . G,..,_.,., !b ' ' ' . ,..,,,.k:k, 11 ' . ' . Coron•, 211 0 0 ••
:.•111~. ,,. 1 0 0 • Ardtr-. c • • ' ' .... . •••• •.. ,. ... .. ' ' •*· .. ' • • • '°"'"..,.._ ' I t t I TOlt ll :U 2 $ I Totoll ,. ' • s ~"''"".~ • • • Oa:lclt ftllj ...... , -, .s J
Ut It~-011 01 I • -J • '
' •
other juniors were accoladed on the
all-area unit.
·Eleventh graders Doug MacLean of
Costa Mesa and Mater Dei's Rick Kniffin
landed second team berths while junior s
Tom Mullinix .of University and Terry
Meisenheimer of Westminster were
relegated to the third squad.
Rounding out the secolld team were
Mark Grigsby (Corona del Mar), Kipp
Baird (Marina) and Wes Thomu (Hun·
lington).
The other third team choices were
Bill ~lcGuire of Marina, Fountain
Valley's George Gerber and Taras Young
of Newport.
ALL.ORANGE COAST AREA
First T••m
Pl•Y..•r, School Height Cl11s Av!'r•g•
Steve Brooks, Huntington Beach 6-3 Jr. 21.1
John_Kazmer, Newport Harbor 6-3 Sr. 13.0
Gary OrgW , Estancia 5·11 Sr. 22.4"
Craig Anderson. San Clemente 5-11 Sr. 14.8
Bruce Mil1er, J\1arina 6·0 Jr. 9.5
Second Team
?i-1ark Grigsby. Corona del Mar 6·2 Sr. 14.7
Wes Thomas, Huntington Beach 6·2 Sr. 15.0
Kipp Baird. Marina 6-5 Sr. 15.2
Rick Kniffin, Mater Del 6·3 Jr. 13.8
Doug MacLean. Costa Mesa 6-3 Jr. 10.3
Third Te1m
Terry A-1eisenheimer. Westminster 6·3 Jr. 16.6
Taras Young, Newport Harbor 5.11 Sr. 19.7
Bill McGuire. Marina 6-1 Sr. 8.0
6-2 Jr. 15.l Tom Mullinix, University
George Gerber. Fountain Valley 5·7 Sr. 7.2
Player of the Year -Brooks, Huntington Beach.
Coach of th e Year -Jim Stephens, Marina.
UC Irvine Ends ·Season
With 96-92 Cage Victory
By HOWARD L. llANDY
DI lilt Dtllt Piie! II•"
RI VERSIDE -The UC Irvine basket·
ball season ended Saturday night at
UC Riverside bvl coach T!m Tift feels
it should i ust be slarUng and that his
squad would ha ve an excellent chance
in the NCAA western regionals this
weekend.
Instead, the Anteaters will pul away
the basketball gear for the season and
watch from the sidelines arter posting
a 96-92 victory over host UC Riverside
berore 1.500 fans Saturday evening.
The win brings the UCI season record
to 16-10. the same mark posted by Cal
Poly rSan Luis Obispo), a team the
Anteaters derealed a week ago, that
js going to the NCAA regionals .
"We are just "beginning to play ' like
11•e should have bf>en playing all season,"
Tift said after the Saturday struggle.
"We have beaten four of the fi ve
CC AA teams in our last fi ve games
but that overtime loss to San Fernando
Valley State apparently was our un-
doing.'' {UCI lost 69-M on a last second
shot in overtime).
''We just let them· tSFVSC) get away
from us \\'hen we had them ," Tift
reflected on the narrow miss of a trip
lo the regionals in Puget Sound, Wash.
Turning to Saturda y's game, TUI prais·
ed the play of Troy Rolph and Richard
Clark. "l though t the y were both great
out there tonight..,
Calendar
Rolph , the only man under six feet
on the Anteater squad that loses only
mid-season a d d i t i o n reserve John
Farwell by graduation, did an outstan-
ding job both on offense and in re-
bounding.
Rolph, the team's noor leader and
the man who brings the ball dOwncourt
in heavy traffic, had his best shooting
night with 21 points. He was umtcppable
from around the key.
•·1 had control of myself ~night. I
only look one bad shot and that was
late In the gan1e when we were leading
by six. I shouldn't have taken that
one but we y,·on and that's the main
thing,"
Clark. a Riverside high school and
junior college star, did · an outstanding
job of rebounding and paced the team
with eig.ht .rebounds. "ll's great to win
like this at home." he added,
In a rreshman preliminary, coach Jer-
ry Hulbert's yearlings c!DSM out the
n1ost successful first-year or jayvee cam-
paign in the history of the school with
a 97-92 victory. The win brought the
season record to 22-2.
Jn the second year of basketball at
UCI (1966-67). the junior varsity poiled
a 22-3 record. Cl!.arles Lumpkins (26)
and Rick Mosier (23} paced the UCI
scoring.
\.IC,,.....,. uu VC Iii 1Yt1'~t (tJI
lt II • " " " • " 1111,.,. • ' • " W1111ingt1111 • ' ' " Moo rt ' • • " L•nc:• • ' • " Cll f'I. ' ' ' " C•1ll • • ' • '"''"""•"" • • ' " CM " ' • H
a.~« ' ' ' • .... , ' ' ' " ...... • ' ' " ..,_ ' • • ' ·-.. ' ' ' ' W•Htri. ' • • ' •1tck • • ' • Vin EOOI ' • • " '•""'M ' • • ' Tott lt ... " ~ TOHiii 0 • • • H1Htl"": UC ••• 1... •• U( lttwoldt 4,
UCI P"rettl I ,...'!0-'oc• """" 1n1"' ~ . • ., """,. tOwklM • ' ' ' W•ttttrt • ' • " ... ~ ' ' ' ' .,,,. " • • • L11m!lllln1 " ' • H -·« • • ' • H•111.., • ' • .. Mlcmt l ' • ' " Mlllltf' • ' • " w•• ' ' • ..
~ " . ' .. -' • ' ' • ' 1 1 H1rrl-' ' • ' Hlflt\115 • 1 ' " o .. • ' • ' l trlllftr • • ' • Toll!t 11 '' ,. t7 """ )S tt ,, tf
Ht lftln'lt: uc• """' llO, \.1(1 , .......
' r
Rustlers Battle Delta
In Sta~e Cage ·Playoffs
By CRAIG SHEFF
Of Ille D911'f '""' lllH 1t'a a safe bet to say tl)at Thursday
night'• opening round of the state JC
basketball playoffs matching Golden
West and San Joaquin Delta college
will be a high scoring me.
1be two conference champions clash
at 7 at Allan Hancock College in Santa
Maria with the winner advancing to
the semifinals.
Both hl&b scoring outfits got by
reeional foes last weekend. Delta had
an easy time In downing Butte, 95-<0,
Friday while Golden West'• Rustlers
were nteoded before tripping Compton,
91·79, Saturday at Rio Hoodo College.
In the final analysis, the Rustler vic-
tory was accomplished by beating the
Compton press.
And that's juJt what coach Dick
stricklin's crew will have to do to defeat
Delta, the Valley Conference winner.
Delta's Mustangs have pressed their
way to a 22-6 season, scoring at a 194.2 cllp per game while allowing 77.6. ·
"It Dgures to be a high ecoring game,"
says Delta coach Ernie Marcopulos who
viewed the Golden West-COmpton playoff
tilL
"Golden West has an e1.cellent, well·
balanced team. They have fine shooters
and they are well-disciplined. They have
three out.standing ball player1 i n
Thompoon (Chrb), Anderton (Jim) and
Ambr<nlch (Brian). I wu aurprlsed to
see Ambrozich play in the second half
after be hurt hls knee, but he came
Siii• JC l"llrl!IP c. Anlt fCtmlno Hon.I, :U·•· vi. v ... tur. IWMltrn STiii ), ""41, J p.m.
Merctd fCllllr•ll, 1 .. 11. "'-Cttrlloa CSoutll
Cot1!1, n.s. 5 "·"'· Gold.., W .. f (5ov1Mr!! C.llfoml&), JU, n. Sin
JMQ\lirl o.111, (Y•Hey), l'f"4. 7 p.m.
Ht rfntll iC..11J, 1,_10, Vt. Long aH<:ll IMl1r..-
pOlll1nl, z...._ ' "·""· ........ ,s-
Goldtfl w ... ti, Con\pfon lt
S.11 Jojoq,ull\ Dell• "· •1111• '° CffritDJ M, 81r110w JI
M.,ctd M, Stn l'rMC:ltce '° lilrlMll 11, H.lnud; U
Venlvr• 102. Sin 8-rdlno 1'.
back and was very eUecUve," said the
Delta coach.
Ambrozlch had to come out midway
through the firat half after reinjuring
his right knee while driving for a basket.
But he started and played the eDUre
second half 8nd thl.s had to be , a lift
to his teammates.
Thompson's shooting along with lhe
board play of Mark Dekker and Anderson
keyed the Rustler attack. ,
Thompson finished with 3.f points, hit·
ting on 11 or 19 field goal attempts
and Anderson canned zo markers, getUng
nine of 15 from the field.
Golden West didn't take the lead for
good .until nihe.minutes remained.
Wtth Compton up by one (82-81), a
short jumper tiy Anderson, A pair of
free throws by reserve guard Kurt Brown
and Andersoo"s charity toss put the
Rustlers ahead to stay, 66--62 •
Compton cut it to two on a lay·in
by its classy forwird Lee McDougal,
but buckets by Anderson and Brown
propelled the Rustlers to a siJ:·point
lead (70-64) •
Ahead 74-68 Golden West went into
Its delay offense and the resu lt was
a rash of Com_pton foul! -and Rustler
free throws -in the remaining five
minutes.
Stricklin's crew finished with a 57.4
percen.tage from the field canning 35
of 61, including 19 of 29 (6$.5 percent )
· in the first half.
Compton hit 32 of 79 (40.5 percent).
OtldM Wat (ti)
~. ~
11 12 4 ' . , . . ' . . ' . . ' ' . '
Thom~n
"'"" DKkt r
AmDro1k:h
.tlnGtrlOl'I
Powert ero..., . 1 • 2
Tot•ll
""',.,. (7t) 1, 1111-lp
).!Aubrey 5J •U
2 Slej)l'lttOll J 1 • 1 I• Mt Ooull•I JO 7 I 21
• ltldltrd-s J J \J 10Sfnlth •O!I
JLoYttt 10!1
t8oyet" 112 3
Stith J OJ 6
Tottll . 32 IS 24 79
HtHtlmt: Goldtn Wt51 .U, COl!IPIOn •1,
GOLDEN WEST'S CHRIS THOMPSON DRIVES FOR TWO POINTS AGAINST COMPTON.
Tift Wonders About Future
1rs that lime or year once again
fot'J' baaketball mentors and coacb Tim
Tift at UCt must be \\'Ondering about
the future about now despite the fac t
his Anteaters have done an out.standing
job this season .
If Tift checks the record book .at
UCI, he will find that Danny Rogers
HOWARD
HANDY
y,•as the first Anteater cage ooach and
he wn at the helm for two seasons
with LdeoUcal JS.11 records.
Next it was Dick Davi.a who took
the Anteaters to the NCAA Western
Reglona l pla yoffs for two straight
seasons before departing for San Diego
State. Davia' teims posted marks of
20-I and 20-9 (Including playoU en-
counters).
Tift hu rinished h1s second campaign
at the UCI helm, both wiMing seasons
and both Umta a 5=onte~ for a pt.yon
berth. -
Tift. unlike Rogers and Davis, would
like to remain at the helm al UCI
and every indication ls the~ that he
will be back next season to wesve an
outstanding freshman team Into a varsity
that has all but one player eligible for
another year of action.
John Farwell is the only senior on the
current UCl varsity,
* * * At UC R..l venkle, aUllldlc dlreder
Frallklhl LiDdebarg aanocmced lMs week
tbat Fred Gou., former UCLA great.
ba1 beta nldrff 11 bl1ketblU coacb •
Go1s, !7, tlped 1 ~., contrlcl
wUli tilt JDchl•ndtn.
To whlcli UCI atbleUc db'tdor Ray
Tbontoa adds: "Thty do tMlc• a Utile
different tlu we dt ltere. We do aot
Uve a.cit datrldl uill we do oot
Utlclpate 1 ei.1a1e la oar basketball
eo1cbiq stiff. Botls 1 Tlft ud Jerry
Halbert>(frosll coac•) tiave done outJt~
df.a& jobt tlail IUIOD."
"* * * Still on the subject of basketball, Tift
reveals he has two more out-of-state
team.a ttntaUvely lined up for home
, I
games in Crawford Hall next year.
Chicago State i.s :a definite entrant
and North Dakota State is a distinct
possibility. North Dakota State is taking
UCl's place in lhe Kris Kringle tourna-
ment at Fullerton I because of the ban
, on CT:,AA teams playing UC!) and would
like lo play UCI.
Only drawback is that the te{lm will
be here durin11 dead week ~ich is
held open and free of athletic cony>eUtion
btcau~ of final examinaUon!. .
* * * Ed Newland, busily engaged along with
assistant Bill JeweU In prepariq the
UCI swlmmlng team for defense of Its
NCAA nJIJege division cbampion$hlp. bas
ont eye pet.ltd beyond the meet la
spr1ngne1c1, Mau. •
Newland says be will start practice
ornd10y for the CINA w1ter polo team
the day afttr bJs l'Wtnlmfn& team re
to tbe southlaltd hm the aallondt.
Newland also reveals that lht West
German naUollal team will be In th•
area a week before the AAU cham·
pltnsblps at tons Btatb BelmO'Dt Plaza
Olympic Pool and that his squad wW
play 1 game ~ Ol!e Anteater pool wit~
Uie Germa.nr.-..
J
' •• . .
. '
". . . ..... -. . . . .
DAILY PILOT ff
Pro Basketball, Univer~i~y Fountain Valley's Lewis,
Hockey Standings AllDRESS T"£ llAU. WITH HANDS fORWAllD
Nine Faces w· CIF W l. C Webb Next · l~· · · rest ing rown ... ,._..,. c.,...._.
Alllfltk Dtl't"-"
Ntw Ytrll
"hl!Htll'ftll
•ot!lll'I '""•!o
W L f"Cl O&
• 71 .MS
~ n .m
,. 11 ..flJ
'° 5S ·'" (fflttll DIYltltll
tt M ,,.
• • ••
••lllmor•
All1n!t
CLMlnlll"
Clwll•M
" ~ ...
u "
.•1i ' ...171 11 1•
.11• ilo\'t
Wn....,. C..iftortMa
Mlflffll Olwlaltol
t""'111Wl\lll;" t4 11 .15J
CMttff 4' t7 "30 11
"hffrll• .... :HI -"' 11111 Deir.IT d '1 .575 21
"•tlttc on1...,
Lot ........r.. .. " .4\i Sin ,.rl MIKO ~1 • . .. J t
s..n11 u • .IU n s.nor... :u. n .ut nn
"°""'NI H ill .ltl ll C.Cllncmd OIYllltn llllt,
Collegiate
Basketball
Scores
wa•T
UCLA llJl'. Srtntord 72
USC ti, C•ll'°rnll II
Llfllol1 n, ft-•rdlne "
Drlt9CWI ''· W•lhl ... ICll'I Sf ... (on 1"1elrlc 116. SI. M1rr'1 n
Or.tori SI. JI, Wo~l ... totl S2
IJSF n. Santio Cl••• '' aASl
"rlMlhlll '7, CorMll M
Olrtfl"IOlllll "· l rowr> t1 HINIJtd t1. VI II 11
p..,.. 70, Coklmlll• SI
ltu19trl ... P'ltfln SI. 111
It-1111/ld 111, Mllnot 71
"'""' II, ColH!• " f.,Oh•ITI 75, ,1lrfl•ld 5'
Ni.11r1 IS. C11>!11t11 ff (...-erTlrMI
L IU 11. len1 71
Lt/Ii.ti 71, NYU n
St. J«irl's 7', l'l'<Wldt11ft 41
F1lrltl•~Oltklnt0r> SJ, Monl<lelr !I.
~ MIDWIST
lndl1na 10" low• n
Cr1119111M .,. c1,...1l1fld St. ,,
Kent St. U, Totldo .P
KtMll SI. n. MlnClllrl'''
st. Loul• ''· '"'"'~ st Minn-It 104, Wl.c.on1ln tl
Mld'll"n 11, Mltlllt•n s•. 13
Ollle U '7, 1..wllne Gr11:n 11
Ktn111 S-1, Oii.it""""-n tovtrtlrn•l
Mlt<Nltt• 14, )(1v!.r (Oh!ol SI ......... t. IS, Colortdo n
""'dll• "· 111111<111 n O!llo St. ... Norlfl~•ttrn 17
llllnols It. tt. SW Ml•IOllrl II (Oii
SOUTM
l'l&rkl1 7', Al1blm1 "
1C..,h,1ck1 U. T•nM .... l l
LSU 6', Gter1l1 4'
Wiit Vlr1111l1 la.4, Vlr•lnl• TIC~ fS
5Dlltft C•rollN U, Wokt 1'«111 7J
Au!IW~ 16, Ml111111.,1 &S
Mltml 11, Mlr1htll 71
Dul<t n, '6or"lrl CINll<li IJ
Loul1vl!lt lot. MtmPhll SI. 7J
ML11IHJ1111I ti, V111dt r1>1n n
M1,.,l111d tt, Vl<t !r>ll M Ca.ertlmel
G-1t1 TICh 11, ftlthbllrtll 11
SOU'THWl"IT
l•YIOr 7', Tnol llCh 71 .
SMU "' lCU 71 N-M"lc" n . ArlfOlll ,,
TtX•I !Et P•M) U, ArlzW11 51. II
ltx•• "' ltlc• •
ltOCKllS' I
aYU JI, Uttll '1
TOUltNAM•NTS ,_1Mnll C1t11,..rtntt
'urTMll ... ll lthmllnli II !cll1mtlon·
llllp)
Ml .. k All111!ic Cini-Ml
UlllVlf"llh' g(,11 ....
$1. JIHth'I (Pt .) II, L1S•ll1 76
(ch1mplon•hlo)
c111 .... 01w111111
1'1111tdlfphl• Tutll1 14, U111lt ''
lnt1"tfltrn chtrnPlotuhl•I
L-non Vllllf 100, J~ HOPkln• ..
1i.out11wn dllmpl-lllPI
GWC Clips
Swim Foe
Joel Penne captured both
the one-meter and thrtt-meltr
di ving events to lead Golden
West College to • 62)JO twlm-
mlng victory over invading
Cypress Friday.
a...... w .. t 16tl un <T1rn1 .oo ""'"l•r r110~-1. Golden w"'
ILi-id!, MtMlltld. fouthltt1 '"° D-lclsonl. Tim•: J:S1.t.
1.450-1. Chine (Cl !. flour !GI
J. Eltfl {Gl. llmt: 11:17.3.
lOO fr-I. LIPOoldt IGI 2. 1'1ul""
IC I J. Eltt""" !Cl. Tltnt1: 1:'2.t
Y frt-1. MclntYtl fG! 2. T1tlhlro
(Cl l. ll:tmW' !GI. Time: i1.!
<IOll lnct. med.-1. t u811 (GI ?. Bruni!"
(Cl J. ~'11 (GI. Tlrn-= 1;56.,
0-111" 111v1ne-1. il'ennt !Gl !.
llorll>I !Cl l. Loton /Cl • Ptlnll;
156.IO
100 bl/tlertl~-1. F1lnbert (Gl '·
E•k-(Cl J. ~~'°" IG). TlrM:
it.O
100 frM-1, 111 betwMn Noth tnd
ltossl !Gl l. T•lll1'9 tCJ. l 1rM: ....
100 lllct-1. Clll!\9 CC I '· Jlll'lnson
(GI, n• tftlra. Tlmt: 1:00.2
jOll frtt-1. PouttCll l(l 1. l utll
(Gl ,, M1n1llt!a /GI. l lf!'lt: J:?S.I
100 tltt •tl-1. B•unrier IC) 1. Lippalclt
tG! S. Clt trldtt CC!. Tim•: 1:0..1
)-meffr dlvll'lll-1. P.,.n1 (GI l,
l ortne (Cl l. Lott n !Cl. ftolnll:
U7.10
.ioe tr'' "i..-1. Cyp•en. Tlmt:
l:n.1
4 Rustlers.
In Mat Meet
a.twe1r'1 '""""' Ntw Y'111 1 IL lollM IOol "1111.-..,.,.1. ns. °"''" us &11Htt. 120, C~l•nd lot
(hlt1M 105,, S.fl 0 1-" S..rtlt 1tl, Loi Allftltl lot
S•n l't1nclac:a lot, B1lllmort IOJ
0n1Y l •rMI IChedultd.
S11U•Y'1 ltftlllh
Ntw Yori!. lit, Boston 110
Cltvl'lancl 10 .. o.lrol1 100
All1ni1 112, (!11e1M11I 1 It
e1tllmort 117, fthqtnhl Ull
?.In Dlfio JU, Portt.nd 1"
Let .t.11,.iu 117, Clllcaeo IGI
On!Y •• mu ICllNll!..:I.
T.idtlln •11M1
5Mttlt •I Mllwaukff
&11rlllt 1t Porlt./ld
Only ....... ld'ledui.d.
T ...... r'sG-t
l"llotflbl 1t O.lrolt
S..Ult 11 fl..w York
MltwwttM 11 Chlc•llO
fl1lllm111t 11 Loo Anttlt•
luff•lo •t Sin oi.vo
BOl!Ool vs. S•11 1'r1r>e!1c• 11 Oek!1llCI
ftltllldttlttll1 at Cltvl'ltn4
Otll~ ·-xr..d\11..:1.
vrrt lnlt
K..,h1t:lif
N-Vert l'ltllllul"911
Ct r911M
FIOtldl1n1
...
ll!•tf D11fltltot
w ' " " " " " " ~ a
~ a ~ d
Wt1t Ol\'l11Q
""· ·"' .... ... ·"' ... ....
.. ,,
" " "'' 1111
W L Pel, G&
"' ?1 .100 ., 2.} .671
lf J6 ~1 2, ..s .36d ' 13"•
''"
U11~
lr.dl•na
M"""hl• 0tn111r T1~11 '1l " .:12( ,.,, S1111r111r'1 Jl11111!1
Ntw York U7, Ca•OllM •n
Pln1t111r9h 14, Florlf:ll1111 12'
ln<tl1n1 12•, le>C•• 112
Onlr .. mu KM<luled.
s•1y'1 1t1u11t1
N-Y.n. 173, \ll'flAlt 111
UllM lOI, Memc>11l1 106
lnOllM 177, Kfnllld<V 127
011ft"9t U2, f lorldl•n1 141, OVlflirM
Only IHlmtl sd\edultd.
Ttlllltrt'I G-
C1rol ln1 11 lnOl1n1 Only 11nw, ia..:tulf(I.
lweM1J"'1 G•mn
fkW Ycrrtr. VI. Vlrglflll 11 Hl<'l'IPIClll
Floridltr>I •I Ullll.
0-tt vs. T1•11 11 l'ort Worth
Ofll" 1111mn KMduled.
loslot1 N""' York MOnlrNI
Toronlo
l ufl•lo
0.lrolt
""' •1tt OfVlllof!
W L lft'l•.01' GI 4f 10 1 ltl 31• lU
•I U 11 'l !l' 1'7 :U II 12 Ill 2ll 11•
nn•n210 11a
II 3' ll " 171 71f 1t 35 10 ~ 115 23'
""°'4111 11.5 Wu! Ohillff
W L T l"h;.0 " GA
CftlCHO •? U I 92 731 ls.I SI. LO!ill 21 :lJ 1• 70 174 i.t
MlnMsol• '' lf u •1 16l IJJ
l't1!11dt1Pnl• 1• " n t0 111 uo Pllllbur9h 20 lD 16 56 1U lfS
Los Mffln 11 :u n •• 1n 151 C1lllornl1 11 <15" S )9 1'1 Ho!
St lwt•Y'l •n11H1
Monlrell I, LOI ........ ~. 2
Chlago ?. Toronto ?, 1~
Ntw York 2, D'lfoll 2, llt
flos!OI> 6, Plltlllut'J!> l Ct llf1M"r>!1 .. Phll1dt!l'hl• t, lit
Mlnnf1(111 J, VentOIN" I
Of>lr t1mn Khl!duled.
IUlldlJ'I •ftlllll
MontrHI •· 0e11olt 1 Ct lifornl• l . Plltsburoh 3. tll MlnntM>lo ), Phll.oiolphl• I
N-Vor11 4, Loi Artt1l11 I B011otl .. St. Louil I
a u1111o •· C1ncouver l Dlll't 11rne1 KM<lul<!<I. Tellltllt'I G1-
No llmfl Khedlll..,.
luti.AJ'S Gll!\tt
Oetr0tl 11 V1Mouver
LOI ... 1>9elH 11 SI. Loul•
-Onlr 111tm11 Kfll!duled.
. lllu&tni.!iOn # 1 &hows tho p111por impact position.
Note th•t my hands 1r1 Madine the dubhead; my
teft arm is more or Ins continuous with th• club·
shaft.
·vet many eolfers incorrtctjy address tht ball
with the RIGHT arm more or less continuous with
tho clubshatt lillustration #2).
I suaest PositlOning the hands just 1bout OPPo·
silo tho ball on wood shots. If you ploy tho ball
farther b1tk in your stance on irons shots, be sure
your hands 1r1 in the ~m• forward poaltion 1s
with tho woods. (illustration #3)'.
&0 1f11MAn. ........ s,,..-
LOW SCORES! HIGH POWER! Gtt!lantyot Coffina: help In Arnold
Palmer's booltlet, "T•• Shots an Fairway Woods," wrltt9n O • clusirely for ruders d .thls column. A copy Is JOUN fM 20C •nd
• ltlmptd, self.addressed •nvelopt 1.nt to Art'IOld Pal""'"• c/o
ttlil nrnpapar.
For Coast Area
Tennis Results
\11r1l1Y
M~ 111) U l'IJ s .. ffl"ftMt
''"''" E••lm•n !Nl loll to Mull !Tl l·I;
cltf •ub (Tl Ml; def Sc~lll•r !Tl
• l.J; cStf flutttrew Ml.
Ptrlno (NI WOii 1·1, •·l: bv11 ....,., ••• °"11111\ {N) bVI: lou 3-11 """" ···J bvt.
Smt!! l~l loll ?-I ; bve: WO!> 1-1, •·l
Dlubln
l1bell •rod Nlchol1 (N) 10111 w!lh
llrown ond A.r>dl•lon !f l 1-'• >-41 dtl
A•IO<I t flll Lin l•J; b''·
Ro,....r Ind Dure•n INl bye; won
... ,. 1·1.
"'"'''" (lJ'\01 11•1~) ,,, •• v ..... ,
Sl~ol" °"'"''" INl lo1t !O F1rr1n fil'l 11-4: Iott lo l'ullfrlon 1-1; 11111 to OUnr> 1-11
lost to McH1rd •4
llDI-(NI lost 1.-, ! .. ; -n ... 1, ... 3.
QulM !NI IMt l•I, '-'• •41 -.... .
Smalt {N) loll I~. '"· •4 1 WO" •·l .
0-Wlllt•
l!lll""n 1nd Pul11<1 CN\ llllef &1rr
•nd '"""''' CPI 6·J. loll dtl lllYO •n<I
CO!'fOf:I Ml ... 2.
l1be!I tnllll Nk l'IOh INI !Pl•! l-'· 1·1/
~ lo l. '-J.
J""'lll' Vtnl'Y Ct1t1 MIU 0) tU) TWJlln .11119 .. I("'"" CC/ IOI! t• birthtr tTl '4" f:lf'f. Mllll 111h M j •<rtco CCI loll ~6. N
rltnotr IC J IOs1 I.fl ""-' tt) I 1011 to Te"'1>lt ,_,
l"ort !CJ losl 14, 1·1
Ooulllt• On lleb and P. Mv•rs !Cl 10·1 lo Buck llV 11\d Ot8"<l' (1 \ J-~. 1-' ltlu •nd Brldje• !Cl Lott $11t!fer tn<I JOl'l~t.on !T l 4, !-•
J~nltlr V1nl!Y cer1111 1111 M1r IHV.l (llh l L•t~nl 111'~ ""'"' ~l'>oem1ker IC l o~!\ ll•ot~erton IL!. tti. tr·de':~F~~e11~Ltl1 .... 1.\ d•• J•'
Guli ck !Cl loll s-1. won '-0, , .. ·-· "'"'l•r (C) loot •4 JOii! 1.1, 1o:s1 U : won ._4
McClrtv tCI ....,,. •·•· &·I, lost 24. won ... J ...... 0.1~ Ind "''~"''"«' ICI 11"1 la J KobSCll' Ind R-<t'°" {Ll. .. 6. '6; 10111 with T•bor •'Ml Pe•r.01 4LI. 4·.C. M .
C1rot'l'ler al'ICI llowl• loll l•. I•:
l •!il '"""· 1-'.
Ju,...,. V•f\lty
sin ci.-1110 1n1 1.•1 •••• si ... 1 ..
Dan Ll'w i1 of Fountain
J{oplng to shore up il.3 Valley }Ugh and nm Bandel
of Corona del Mar should con· defense and add some punch sider a road show for their
to it.s hitting attack , Universi· 168-pound wrestling activities
ty High 's baseball t e a m after meeting for the fourth
travels to Claremont to meet time this season in the CIF
Webb High Turesday. championships at Redondo
University's Trojans com-Beach High Saturday night.
milteed five errors and were Lewis has betn the victor in all four matches by a nar·
only able to collect a pair row margin. He has won three
of hlU in losing to host Apple of the events by one point
Valley, 5-1, Saturday. including Saturday's title con·
The loss ran University's test and the other by a fall.
record to 1-2. F 0 11 0 win g Lewl.s was the lone Orange
or one minute duration each .
Theo four judges awarded the
dectsion to Seals Y.'hen neither
wrestler was able to galn an
advantage on the scoreboard.
The loss was 1 heartbreaking
blow to Walker, Wagner and
the 'Fountairl Valley title
aspirations.
(HAM .. IONIHll'
,, Illa. -Pl••t CGIM~t) oer,
C•<rfl"t IC1l1•IC0).
10. lbt -COOi< CLOINl<IC! dt4.
SllM IM!•I COlll). '
11S lbs. -M11""l CP1c111(J doll. C1111rt CUol•r>cll
ltJ 1116. -Wll1Y tEht n"°"'•rl dfl. P1Ck•ll !B~1wl1Y~.
1)0 lb1. -N<1«l1 !Mlrt Cott•) HI,
flo'r lf (AVll l•Ofl).
!Jt 101. -C.....111e1 (l o1tft1) lit!.
••lilt tl ... 11111.
t•I lbt. -Ct l! 10.w.,.Y! <le!. C1• (L...,11'\Qtr).
1• tb1. -Ev.,., lP1cUL(1) f:ltl. Cox
COMIOLATIO"
.. !'M. -V1L1r !LI ft.,..,11) •t1. Kehltt 1e11111ei.1.
106 lbt. -Wtl!llW (lfl(lfltl ) ttl. LOOflff !Ont1r1tl,
IU lbl. -\111•11•1 IKt lll'lffYI ttf,
ll11rfl• IP1dllc1I.
1)3 ID'$. -l'.Ul.,.11 IHu.Mfl'lll <!~!. flttllllO (Mllllli.•n).
llD lb1. -Wtl1on 1wui.r11l tlll. ,l.IOll!O (A111 .. !.
l:U. 1111. -Whll1kw tto"•""'I t•I. Tltofnton (Wt1! T..-r1nce1.
1•1 Ill,. IC"lli""t (LomHC.) dtf, Ct•llY lPKlflcl.
UI 1111. -ICllO• ICNl!tYI "'t. F••· """°'' tO-.O..vl. U7 tot. -N-Otf. (wit tVlt-
llM" \l•lltY),
I... tbt. -Ptl"ltlt !Glt!ln) ttf, ... lmf'dl (Whl l!M"ffl'ICO).
171 tbs. -L11W11 tW11!mlfltlt rJ <Jtf, Zollmofl !~nlo ,,),
tf4 lbl. -Fhl'1•< ICorllNI tlll.
MCC.•fl cc.n1er>nl11J . H.,.,, -Wolk.,. !Fwnttln Vt ll•vl
11111. Fl"'fl" fSlmlj, •In.
Fl ... I KIM"l!I : Mlrl C111t1 "?1, C1ll•·
lco Ind Ltull!>lltr "M, Fovnt•ln V1!11Y
•rid P.clfk 1 JS. Del-• :ro. L--tlld ".c:lffl; 19, 0..11rlo 11, M-111
16, Glflflhl IS, U•I•"'· 8 r•'#Wf t 11if
SUrlrl" HUii IJ, Cor-Otl Mer IL
..... 1.nw. "·
County wrestler to gain an Tuesday's game, the Trojans individual championship as
will play their first home lilt coach Vem Wagrter's Foon-
Friday, meeting La Sierra of tain Valley Barons finished in
Riverside . Uni defeated La a tie for fourth in the tean\
Sierra, 16-7, last week. standings Saturday with 2S
The Trojans scored their Ol'l· po~~~ Costa was the team
lY run in the third inning winner with 37 followed by
when Bill Ruckle singled. stole Calex.ico and Leuzinger with
second, took t h I r d on an 26 each. Corona del Mar
overthrow on the play and finished 15th with 12 points.
(Oftl••lol. I
1S1 tt>•. -,.,1brloh1 1iw,...•11!.I °"·Ii='==============;;; &o,trd IF11lltr10.0'.
Fount'ain Valley'.!! scored ll'-hen the Apple Valley
center fielder bobbled the ball. heavyweight favorite Bob Walker. ran into trouble in The run tied the score, but b I d
UI lbt. -Ltwi1 I l'our>l81A \lfllt J l
lltl. ll•nOtl (Cor....., <It! Marl, 14.
111 lb1. -,Lek In lflur,..,.,gtlll dal. Comt11 (Monltlt'<).
lf.' IDs. -S!6oll (M!r1 Cll!illl dfll.
e111ttn•b"f tS11nn1f HIH1).
Hvv. ~11• !Ltull1>11t •I f:l.tt,
Hlltrll lC11t".<lcol,
CIF Basketball it v.-as short-lived as the \~in· a sem ifinal match. He ~le eventual champion M 11 to n AAA.A 01vlt1t<o ncrs came back wilh three Seals of Leul.inger High 10 v1rt1um 0.1 14, w ... .., " r• ... o ~v ...
runs (two unearned) in the a >S standoff in regulation llm••>
home half of the frame . Apple time and the mat ch 'o\'as fore· P11..ie ... :~A~t:::~~· ~1
e LINCOLN e
A IC ARC WELDERS
111 Arn11. m """· SIDl 1111 .. ,., -......
e1rn111et• wit~'
• Hll-a Piii...-..,.,,,
• a1«1rM1 IMllllw A
11' , .....
• 0.-..iM ,,.,,., a u• c••i.
• 6' '"'""' t1lll1 a w•ll ""'·
"''IO • tomplelt 110elt
ot w1ldlno ~ c11n!n•
f<llllP!Mlll. '"""''" .. w.ldlnp/IM'1ll1'19 tOCll. V. I. ANDHSON
1t4 W. 16t'tl It .• CM l'H: ,q.nJt
HAV& A NICa DAY Valley'• first run (in the se-_ .. into two overti'me period• cond) 'o\'as also wiearned. 1-~~:::__:::::__:::__::::::::_:=_>:::::::_ __ "'::'~'~':':":~'...:"~·-':':':"~"'...'."'.__ __ __c'::=============
The winners added their
fin al tally in the sixth.
Righlhander Phil Hancock
pitched well in dtfeat and
also contributed the only other
Uni hit (a single) off Apple
Valley righlhbander Ke 11 y
Hove.
un1,..,1ltt-Ill
811• ...
i"ll!ICOC:~"( ;
M1nrl<l111C"'l~
C•ll, Jb
il'1t1er1on. !I
w11~ • ., c
e~n,., '' ltuc~lt, Jb
LlorMlt, r!
lotoli
..
' ' ' ' ' I
' ' ' ,, ,.,,,, v,u,, 01 ..
H1vntt, Cl
Oll1t. If
l l'IOm PIC<>. lb
C111l11en, rl
Dll<lltr. u
Wrlthl, 1t1
Ellrlr>k, r
How. •
To!lll
' ' ' ' ' ' • ' »
' • • ' • • • ' ' ' I
' ' ,
' • • • • • • '
• •• • • ' . • • • • • • • • • • • •
' ' • ' " ... ' . ' ' > I
' • • ' • •
' • • , • • '
VnlY~tll!'I'
A ... lt Vllll •
' eci1 000 0 -1
011001 ~-s
• • ' ' . '
Sale! Our rough, tough,
brawny, gutsy tire.
33~~-'"•ndoldlite.
E78·l4 whitewall tubeless. Reo.3&.15.
JC, Prep Gymnastics
ICllll 151 def khwel1lff IBI "l·S1 11f"f fir....., .O; dft $trO(k~ t~; f •! l"t~IWtll 4-0.
~~!~ {SI loll M ; WOii I·•
lleat !Sl loll M i '""" 6-tl. Ml, j .I_
E;l(/11< {$) io.1 .... -..... t-J. H
Exhibition
Baseball
Baseball
SOUTH COAIT (ON~EJll"NCl
S•n Ditto Mt1t
F~llerlon
w L oa ' .
s.~ 01.,.
Cerrlloi
Mt. kn ... n!Oflto
llr•nH Co111
5•nl• Ant
' ' ' I . ' ' ' . ' . '
MY EXPERT
10 ROOFERS
NEED WORKl
u. •• ~,··lllt W1 tie tlle ll••t
"''" 111 '"' .,. ••
' ' '" ..
'" '
WE~DA ROOF ING
170CI s.,. ... ,
N•w,,,rt '"ch
645-1691
Dwbln Ktllv 1nd Lur>• {SJ o~ 5(n011ocr1er 1rod Wo11t.Jn1 fl ) •O, '-0; dtl Ton"'sori •nd Mllm••"' ... ,, ,_,_ El1vl(:ctl •l'ICI IC!r>Cl lf:I 151 WOii ... ,,
..... loll u. 1•.
JUftlor V•nlh l"dlMfl 011 \IV.I Bt1M Gt•ndt int Ill Haml!ICll IEl det. ICe>rvlll (Ill. 6°11
1~!. i.!~~1tf. ll:~~t~1·)~%~J. G.ertllV
Hunter !EJ won 6.J. 1.1. 4-0 CIC!l (El lcw.I 2-'• 11'°" 1-1, woe
... ~IO(t !El won J4, loll l-' !.-, -n l·I. (Hublt• Fri/lltr I nd S"¥t r>50'> (El clei. '!::~~:1,:":"" L~u~~uo~!1C ll4i.1-,.!~L 1 ~et·
H1" tnll &oomu (£) won I·~. 1-l; "N(ll> /t-], ,_,_ , ......... .,,
1E•l1111 1111 (J) lllU Gfl ft'f
Junt1r >'•f"lil'P Cllll MIW 41101 (JH'o) G1rtlt~ Grt1'1
11~•111
L1r't ICI loSI 1·6, 1-', 2-', won ... 9•1<19fl fCI !Of! i.-, ) I, C.6, wOfl 4·•. C1rrko IC) lost I ... 14, 1·6, won ..,
Gr•tMt (Cl lo•1 M . 114. 0-~. G-6
Doiobl•• LY•tn~ •r.d Ort11 ed ICI J.J, ICl)I 3-4. ).,.
11111 IM FIM"I (Cl ,.., o-4. G-6. lied 1-1. tmt
S•111r••''' 1t1M11t•
N1w York (Al 1, lltl!lmo,. e
CMct.., !Al I, C!ncln111t1 1
Ntw YO<~ IN) 10, SI. loYll I
ll01lon '· corn111n10 St:lu1d Otttoll.
MlnnHOll, Clnclnn•I! 1
LO• A"Oeln .S, ,.,111n1t •
Mln ... 1011 f . OflrD~ •
Wo1hlnt!Ot1 J MOfllrT•I 1
Moullon '· ICOl!H I (ltv s. 11 '""Int l
Pl11•burth II, l'hll1df!1>hlo 11, 11 In·
nin••
511> Dhieo I. Tc!IYO Lotte Orlon• 1
011!!arod IJ, MllWIU~ff t
Cl&Vrl•"" 7, Stn Fr1ncl1to •· 11 1.,.
11!"•' C1lltorn!1 s. CM~•M (NI '
S11,..•r'1 fl'""th
51. L0\111 5, Ntw Yo'~ /~l 1
l1t1Tmort '· Nrw York IAI l Comb/Md l<>Utf:I CNew V&rl< N. Chi·
c••o .a.. Pllhb\lrvh) J. K1n111 C.11'1' I
I M!Otl I, Hou•ton 7
CtllCIPO (,4\ S, Ctnc lr>r>ll! 1
Chlt•tO CNl I, C1lllor..t1 S
Cltvt l-I, Stn F••ntllco 1
Los "'"''1111 10, ,.,rlt nlt 1, sl• 1 ...
lllno•. t1ln
Ml1Wtuktf ], 0 1klt"" 1
Ml~Mt!I 4. Oftrol! J
MOntrt•I I, Wlll'llnoton O. 7 lnr>lnt1•.
r11n
Pl!Ubur9h J, PhlllOtlt>Jll• 1
Stn DI"° J, l oll.'o LCUt OrlOfll I
GET MORE FUN OUT
OF LIFE!
GOLi' INSTRYCTION
ClctsJ "A" h11tructorJ
GROUP LESSONS ..
MONDAYS
TUESDAYS
WEDNESDAYS
THURSDAYS
SATURDAYS
7:00 ,,M.
ID:OO A.M.
ID:OO A.M.
l :OO ,,M,
10:00 A.M.
FR!£ USE 0 , CLUIS
AN D A GAME OF GOLF
$9 FOR 6 LESSONS
PRIVATI LESSONS -$4.~0 oa. °' 'J0.00 fO< 6
Golf Equip~e~t Sale
Foremosts 'El Tigre' 4+2 with 2 bella ol liliergl1aon
4 ply polyester cord body. Dual whitewall design, too,
Sale 3588
plus led. tv: arid o~ tire.
Whlt•w•ll t~.ie11
Siu Reg.
F7&.14 40.$S
F78-15 40.9S
Fed. tax
2.38
2.42
Sale 3788
plus Nd. tu: and old tire•
Whttowoll tullol-
Siz4 Reg.
G78-14 42.95
G78-15 42.9S
f.cj, , ••
2.55
2.64
Sale 43 88
plus 3.19 F.E.T. and o ld lire
900-15 whltew1ll tub•le11, Aeg. 41.95
Foremost• heavy duty thock
absorbers. r•lllffl ,...,,1~ ........... ~,.
SHOCK ,._eS01l81Ellt CUA!ltANTEIE
tf • P1mn1y1 htoV)' duty V.ock l1lli •tt•r
Sale 3988
plus led. la)( and old Ura.
Whlltwlll IW.teu
Slz• Reg. Ftd. Id
H7B-14 "4.15 2.7•
H78-15 44.95 2.IO
Sale 41 88
plus ftd. tax •nd old u,.
Whffw1ff tubM ...
Siz• R99.
J78·14 41.15
Fod.111
U1
Sole pr1ces eHoc:tlve
through Sottmtoy only!
__ ,
599·
-h 111111U1Uon ~ 1 P1'nn1r1 A11to Cente.,
oue 1n delK iv. mtlerl•I• Of wo1tcl'fl1n· ·-\hip or -•out wflUf! lflt otl~lfltl our· A-n .:1>1ser owns lhe c.tr, /ust contik us •n<I •
BIGGEST EVER
CLU·S-25°/o to 50°/o off Four Golden West College lr••••••••••iiiiiiiii
wrestlers will seek honors in Wh It p I K th• state junior college meet y ays 0 now
Friday after the quartet
qualified tn a !lectkmal meet BOB PALEY at Mt. San Antonio College
l~t weekend .
The state meet will be held
Friday and Saturday at El
Camino College. j
The Rustlers' Dave \\lorn-\
mack had the top tUort, ptac·
ina second in the 125-pound
dlvlskm. Sieve Kurtz (150) ancl
Doog Hllllard (177) both
• finls!ied third ond Tom FO..
placed routlh In the 134-pound
class.
.Golden Wt!!l't P11t Bettley
(Ill) and John Noble (167)
each finlshed fifth in lhelr
divlslOm.
Fullerton caplured the f\11.
San Antonio !lectlonRl meet.
~
r
•APl!CO
INSURANCE
L.t'1 wttte ••• "'IKtRC;l,fl•• rl9ht
Mw: lff '•ll"f '9 Jl•t • ll•Pl"t ,rt11et11
eye tKflt .. S.111 ,,.. er Mo•ttlr. Ho
-~NU • 1.-her• .te,hnt 111 ... 111, Ha ,...,.. tlle pr•l"f"
pl t• I ... fet cl1111 h 1111 • CINI
....... We ..... te 114fMlt ft, lltt wttll ......... i-•. 11rl-... '°''
. H......-. 111 9fl fntlc• --4•1t ,._.
ff '" .,. '1cft1111bllf ,, •"•"'' ....
-........ '""' It .....,..~ ,.. ,. ... If ... wfft. hit htey. •lll•Pllke
k •h ........... "'' .. , ...... ,. ... ,
c•--.e. •lcely '-'1119'111 t• Y••r e.rect
Hiid, etHI I•• .. 11at, l•ff y111 •
wall 111 tile jtrH.U. C1!1 111 h•.
Llk1 •••I H .. 9'111dNti: 4?4 I. 17tlt
SI., C"t• ~ .... Ml•11e: '42•'100.
LADIES SHOES WE HAVE THE
Ve1ue1 to $]2.00 NEW INSTOMATIC
CAMIRA
HOW $14.95 STOP0ACTION
~ S•• yoursetf Mt oction
ll BB in 1 mln•t•
$2.00
SKIP MAY'S
COSTA MESA GOLF RANGE
2717 NIW,ORT ILVD. 545-tttl
At tM Ore~Cevnt} '•Ir Gt•un4•
-ALSO-
SKIP MAY'S
NEWPORTER GOLF COURSE
1117 .IAMIOllll •D.
At th• N1•11.,.ter Inn
•
J'tnfl'8Y\ fp~1Ust w II ,.pll<ll the CM/«.· Clrl. l1Y9 h••'I)' d v v ~ock 1t no extr111:h11!1$.
For•mod8! mulft•r ln•t•ll•d. -
MU"P"LltR GUARAN"flC: 17~!: If• Pe1>Mv•ne1~y <1utr mulllfl •••II 111~•
''"ltfl•Unr> oi I f'enn•yJ "'vto C11'1t••. .,.,. Ir> <Mier t~• rner~r>•r>lllM 0< w"'I •
•n•r>U•lo 111 we110111 wllll• "" 011elr>•I
DUIClllMI nwr>• !IUI ~·" 11111 tonhct 111 Arne1lcan
~fl<! I i>.nneyJ UlllCllllll wlll 1t01ttJ1 H•~ Ca•I. MtK tl ... llftV)I OWl)I n•u!ll•t •l no •~tit ,,,,, ...
•
Yos, you un •hip 12 to 5 Sundoy1, too, ,tony of th .. e Penney Auto C.nton:
FASHION ISLAND, N•wporl Contor ; HUNTINGTON CENTER, Huntin9t0118Hoh
U1e Ptnney1 Time Payment Plan.
•
-. ·-......... -. . ........
•· • .J.,f,_D_A~IL~V_,;_1'11.~0-T~~~~~=M=o=nd=ay~,~M=•~=h=t=,=l~fll_,;_~~'' '
Mo·re Thrills Than Cash·
Muncey Latte r Day Powe r Boating Gar Wood I
or the Hydroplane Hall of
Fame, is a latter day Gar
Wood in a sport that pays
off more In thrills th an cash.
''I used lo dangle my feet
Jn the Detroit River when Gar
Wood was making history with
bis MiSs: America," said '
Muncey, attending tbe Chicago
'
CHI CAGO fAPJ -Bill !l.1un-
cty, lour-lime Gold CUp cham-
piori and 42-year-old member
Boat Show closing P'eb. 1 with ~
his latest $70,000 marine
mount.
Muncey, who started power
boat racing in 1948 and
beca me the most successful
dri've r in modem unlimiled
bydroplane . racing, baa a lot
of respecl for Wood, who near-
ly a hall • century ago set a
, world record of 1211 miles per
~ hour. ·
HARD BEAT TO WEATHER -Melee II, a Cal-43 sloop sailed by Don Ayres
. rr., Newport 1-larbor Yac ht Club, is shown in a thrash to weather in the rugged
Miami to Lucayo race, third of the Southern Oc~an Racing Circuit off Florida .
Melee held together in the rough going across the . Gulf Stream tQ take top
honors in Class C and second overall. Several yachts were disffiasted.
Nassau Cup
Race Hit
By Protest
NASSAU. Bahamas lAP ) -
Sorctry, a 61-(oot sloop owned
by Ja mes Baldwin of New
York. crossed the finish line
first Friday In the Nassau
Cup, but her feat w a s
overshadowed by a wave of
protest5 over announcement of
the unofficial standings in the
six-race Southern Ocean Rae·
ing Conference.
Apparent winner of lhe con-
ference was Running Tide,
Jakob Jsbrandtsen'1 • ~foot
sloop.
Specific complainlS were not
aired . However. a protest
meeting was scheduled for \o-
day.
Sorcery 11•as skippered by
Bruce Kirby in the »mile
raC'e from lhe Nassau
lighthouse to Booby Rocks and
back.
Ted Turner's converted IZ-
metc r racer was second on
elapsed time.
Yankee Girl. A 55-foot sloop
O\\'ned by David Steere or
Dallas, Tex .. w11s second In
the unofficial SORC 1tandings
and Dora, 57-rooter owner and
skippered by Lunn Willl11ms
of Chicago \\'as t h i r d .
Overton Race Goes
To Sloop Sundotvner
Jack Hall 's 12-foot sloop Rag
Time from Newport Harbor
Yacht Club led the Overton
Series flttt home Sunday in
I h e P o i n t Dume-Santa
Barbara Island race sponsored
Drag Boat
Season Set
The openin1 of the 1971 drag
boat racing season is schedul·
ed for March 20-21 as the
National Drag Boat Associa·
t..ion stag~ the Sprina Cham·
pionships at Long Beach
Marine Stadium.
All of last year's lop point
producers will be on hand for
the spring opener headed by
Dwight I Hay I Bale and his
speedy blown fuel hydro ''Lika
de Split".
Saturday's racing g e I s
under way al 10 a.m. as the
NDBA 's new ski class and
jet boats vie fo r \\'Orld records
in lhtir own competition. Al
2 p.m. the spectacular 100
mile-per-hour equipment \\'ill
start tuning runs for Sunday's
racing.
•
"
by California Yacht Club.
But Rag Time was unable
to save her time on Ed
Sunberg·s Cal-43 sloop Sun·
downer which emerged as the
overall and Class A handica p
winner.
Second overall was Charles
Hllthaway's Columbla·50 Gem
from the host club, and third
was ll\usion, 11 Newporl-4l
skippered by Ed McDowell ,
King Harbor Yachl Club.
Class winners were Sun-
downer in Class A. Illusion
in Class B. Pcricus. an
Ericson-41 skippered by W.
V. Wright of Huntington
Harbour YC In CI a ~ s C,
and Blue ~1ax . \Villiam Le11·is,
Windjammer YC.
The race started Saturday
at 11 a.m. in a moderate
northeaster that provided a
spinna ker re11ch to Point
Dume and freshened lo about
15-20 knots for the run to
Santa Barbara Island.
Rag Time finished the 9.1·
mile race at 4 a.in . Sma ller
boats which did not rini sh by
daylight gol caught in 11 li~ht
air hole off Marina de\ Rey
and did not fin ish until mid·
afternoon.
-
Puerto l'alla,1•ta Mat•i1ur
"But J think it ,was Guy
Lombardo , wbo won the. Gold
Cup in 1946, who did most
for the game," &ai d Muncey,
who like legendary bandleader
Lombardo also is a musician.
"Hydroplane. fans still ask
me more questions about
Lcmbardo than anybody else,
and about his series of Miss
Tempo racers in the Gold Cup
competilion."
Muncey, who won four
President Cup victorieS ~nd
was three-time national cham·
pion In 15 years of }!ydroplan-
ing, plays the alto saxophone.
clarinet, piano and nute.
Besides thaL he has a fami·
ly of six -five boys and
a girl ranging from 18 to
three weeks old -and such
oulside interests as politics
in whictt he Jost · two years
aio as a candidate for
lieutenant go~ernor in the
state of Washington ..
t.-funcey, who has 185 pounds
stacked impressively on a 5-
foot 81.l.i inch frame. is con-
tracted to drive in 1971 the
U-71 Atlas Van LI n es
hydroplane. a Jn-toot craft
powered by a Rolls-Royce
airplane engine .
In his last race. Muncey
won the gold Cup at San Diego
last September and he starts
this year's unt·lmite d
hydroplane competition May
23 at Miami, Fla.
Muncey, wh o hit a peak
speed of 19'l miles per hour
in 1960 -just below the world
record of 200 J\tPH -has
had his share of spills in a
sport shocked by frequent
fatalit ies.
"I've had maybe as many
as 10 accidents, two or three
quite serious," said Muncey ,
"But I never had a bad injury.
even though I've been un -·
conscio us almost every time
before I left the cockpit.
"I don't have a fa talistic
racing feeling and have had
some of my best races after
accidents.''
Muncey. a native of Detroit.
moved "dead broke" in 1955
to Seattle where in 1962 he
was vote d that city 's "Man
of the Year in Sport.~."
He agrees that hydroplane
racing can 't compare with
other sports in f i n a n c i a I
returns. "A top driver may
win $12 ,000 to $15,000 in pur.1:es
annually. and maybe another
$20.000 from out.side benefits,··
said Muncey.
"But you have to remember
that our sport turned pro only
seven or eight years ago. and
there are only about 15 pros
in the world who are entrusted
with our expensive craft.··
The 1971 Gold Cup. for in-
stance, was awarded to
Madi59n, Ind., for July 4 on
a $3{1.00lf guarantee. First
priie probably will be about
112.000.
Puerto Villarta on Banderso Bay. ~fexi co. Is tout·
J.ng the newest marina for cruising yachtsmen. Por·
tions of th e marina art 11till under constructjon but
\\IJIS capa ble of accommoda ting the 26 yachts in tht
~larina del Rey to Puerto Vallarta race plus a fleel
of cruising pD\\1er boats. Boats .aboye are shown
1noo red stren to the sea \\'all after the PV race.
(
\ •,
.. ••\•• ......... ~ ................ .
Sears
I
Frtt ~\a~ment wiUiin. 911 dayt
of purcha~ if battery proves de-
leclive. Alter 90 days{ _we· re-
place the battery, if cmective,
and chlrge you ooly for I.be per·
lod of ownership. based on the
regul1r price leu trade-in at
the time of return. prorated over • number o( montlu of 1uar-
111tff.
I
; ., .. ,
SAVE 110!
Timing Li ght
Regula• 129.99 19 2,9
For I or 12-volt systems. Solid st.ate
ci rcuitry. Chrome plated . With long
cord. E1sy to operate .
Tune-Up Kit
s.11 ·i -· 11.so
lneludes: Condenser,
Rotor and Points.
199
• ....... .... -·
All We ather
SAE IO W-30
Motor Oil
Protecl.5 your enitne in 11! weather. 1().30
.,..·eight for all engines.
I
,I
Booster Cables
Regu lu'I.29
For 1lx or
twelve volt
ca~. ~7132 99¢
Plus 26 other 6 or 8 cyl.
Short Block Engine s at ''
s179 to s199 With Trade-In . . ·--nm (,\lllGU , .. " .......... ......, __ ~ '°"'"" llOU~ COVHllA 'MtU'W'OM ...., .................. t1••• ..... ..,., .... ....,, ......... ,..
• •• -·-.,_(
M•-P.Ultllf• -
•
Re&ular $27 .99
Trade-ID Price
99
Fits 90 % of
All American-
Made 12-Volt
System Cars
fREE SEARS
BATTER·Y
ISSTALLATION
Carburetor Air Filter
T!'llps harmful dirt before.19 9 It reaches the carbuertor.
Gives better gas milure.
A1 k About Sean
Convenient
Credit Plans
SA VE 12 11:!
ALLSTATE
Spark Plug
Regula.59~
1952 to 1957 Chevrolet 235
6 Cyl. Cubi£ In~h Engine
' 6 and 8 Cylinder Engines
Exchanges
-·-
~· l"ft" '"' lllnl rt tff!MU I ''"'" -c• ·-''"'' ,. ...
fllell1••96U f'tl•••Nll " 11'1.1119 ..... ,,,_
•
'
Taking It Easy
Red China I
War Plans
Decided
By PlllL NEWSOM
VPI Forelp New1 Aaailytt
In the light of history. ,,
may be assumed that Red
Chinese leaders already have
establis~ in their own minds
the point at which they will
1ntervene in the Indochina
war.
This ~"OU!d be the point at
which they decide the United
States and its allies pose an
imminent threat to Chinese
borders, whether in North
Vietnam or Laos.
History is mentioned since
Ute allusion is to late October
and early November, 1950,
when the Rte! Chinese entered
The ba'by camel at the Dallas .zoo was one month old la,.5t "'eek and it looks like
he'll be aJl neck as be and his mother bask in the warm sun.
the Korean war in force
despite 'assurances from the
United States and the United
Nations that lhe U.N. advanct
LA Earthquake Insurance
Claims Nmv Hit $15 Million
to North Korea's Yalu RJver
border with Red China posed
no threat to China itself.
ft was another time of no
diplomatic contact between
the United States and Red
China, a circumstance which
the then U.S. ·Secretary of
Slate. Dean Acheson, found
regrettable and Chinese in-
NEW YORK (AP)
Despite wide accept.ance of
the notion that earthquake in-
surance is either unavailable
or prohibitively costly, claims
from the reeent Caliromia
temblor are now estimated at
$5 million.
Industry oflicia\!'l refer to
a 1969 report that shows 184
companies write !'luch in-
surance in that state. And
a survey of homeowner rates
show they range from about
$1.50 a thousand to $3 a
thousand.
Jn other words, the owner
or a $20,000 home might pay
frorr1 $30 to $60 for a policy
to insure him a gain st
catastrophic damage, and the
owner of a $30,000 home from
$45 to $90.
In 1968, industry records
show. $9 million in earthquake
premiums "'ere v.• r i t t e n
throughout the country, S6
million of them in California.
The California insurance
commissioner, Richards D. ·
Barger, states flatly that
homeowner insurance i s
available and at a reasonable
rate, and that no new legisla·
tion is needed.
Some of those who have
proposed changes in the law.
he aays, acted without first
School's Main Office
Girls' Locker Roo1r1,
LOS ANGELES (AP) -
When classes convene Monday
a t e a ~ t h q u ake-damaged
Audubon Junior High School.
Principal Ernest L. Carbaugh
will receive visitors in the
girls' shower room.
He moved his desk into the
tiled expanse Friday, ex·
plaining lhat "It was the only
place."
Carbaugh paid little al·
tention to the piles of soiled
tennis shoes and towels. Nar
did he seem to notice the
rows of showerheads nearby.
Instead of pictures. the
walls arc lined with rows of
gray lockers.
Vice principals and
counselors also are housed in
the building.
"We can manage here very
well," Carbaugh said.
The girls' gym was one <>(
the few buildings on the cam·
pus rated safe after the Feb.
9 temblor.
"When this school was built
• in 1929," the principal said,
"it was the showplace of the
district.''
He and his starf have oc·
~ cupied the m a i n ad·
; ministration building since I.he
Fill 'er Vp
quake, but pupils have not
been permitted inside.
"Builders say it would pro.
bably stand up through
another quake," Carbaugh
said, ''but you can't take that
kind of chance with children.''
He added that the boys'
gym, the cafeteria and the
shops all will have to be
demolished.
Meantime. bungalows have
been erected on the school
parking Jot and three school
buses will serve aa classrooms
-sometimes parked on the
campus. sometimes for educa·
tional field trips.
~'Pray it doesn't rain." said
Registrar Frank Bates. "If
it rains \1•e'll ha~·e to bring
the physical education classes
indoors." But where indoors?
Boys at Audubon haven't
suited up for P .E. or taken
showers since the Feb. 9
quake wrecked their gym.
Now the girls obviously won't
shower either.
Audubon is one of three
quake-damaged schools slated
for replacement
The projects -still on the
drawing board, are expected
to cost $750,000.
There aren't any gas stations at Lion Country
Safari. e\·en i( this pachyderm thinks he's a service
s tation attendant. Elephant.s "'ere given free rei gn
checking the facts and are tervention the result o f
"traaic" ilYIV\rance on their now "scratching for something e· ., ......
to talk about." He insists the parl.
t 1 d As President t~ixon now and presen aws are a equate to President Johnson befou hiin protect homeowners. have charted the U.S. course
Sen. John Tunney (0.CaliL), in Indochina action or the
disagrees. lie argues that the 'bil · universal report to his office pos:n ty of action to be taken by Red China always
is that coverage remains too has been high in their calcu~·
expensive for homeov.'ners and lions.
small businessmen. and he In North Vietnam, prior to
seeks a V»ay to provid:? the bombing halt of March,
government aid. 1968. U.S. bombers rarely
The answers lo t h c struck north of the Hanoi·
mysterie~ involved -how. Sor Haiphong complex.
example, the notion became In Laos, a target taboo to
so widespread that quake in-U.S: bombers has been a new
surance was unavailable -hard-surface road being built
may forever lie in limbo, but by the Red Chinese running
there are hints as to what from China's Yunan Province
happened. and aimed in one direction
First. there may be close toward the Leos-Thailand
lo 200 companies writing such border and in the other toward
insurance, but that doesn't the Laotian royal capital of
mean the pubnc knew it. To Luang Prabang.
a great extent, insurance is When Sou t b Vietnamese
bought as well as sold. Some forces struck with U.S. -air
people just didn't kno1v they and logistic support against
could buy it. the Ho Chi Minh Trail in
"I'm not awatt of any com-Laos, Nixon acted quickly to
pany that actually advertised assure Peking that the action
its availability," said an in· meant no threat to Communist
dustry spokesman. ''It was China.
there. There was no secret Between I.he wars in Korea
of the fact. But it wasn't and Indochina comparisons
advertised.'' come easily.
Then there was the matter It was on Oct. t. 1950. that
of deductibility. p 0 I i c i e s Red Chinese Premier Q1ou
generally call for exclusion En-lai declared Red China
of damage up to 5 percent "will not stand aside" if North
of the policy's face arnowit. Korea should be invaded.
111eaning that the O\\'ner o( The West assumed that In
a $20,000 house would be such an event the Chinese
liable for damages totaling would step up their aid to
Jess than $1,000. the North Koreans but would
Clearly. some people felt not send troops -a sup.
that if they had to p:iy $50 position proved tragically in·
correct one month later. or $60 for protec! ion they
shouldn't have to pa y such The exoerience taught cau· lion to \Vashington which one
large bills themsel\'es, and so n1ore is beiting the Chinese
they dismissed the entire
policy from their portfolio. v.·1JI not enter the conflict,
but this time based on its
Barger. incidentally. claims own forebearance in the con-
that policies v.·ere available duct of the war as well as
with deductions of as little verbal reassurances.
as 2 percent. But how and ;o====-~-========•I
where? fron1 regular insur-
ers, he said. All a hon1e o~·ner
needed to do was ne~otlate
a lower deductible for a higher
premium, he said. Bul how
many people knew lhis.
LOCAL
No olhtt nt wtp•p•r ltll1 you
1 more, •wtry dty, •bout wh•t'1
qoin9 o" in tliit Grttltr Ort ntt
Coit! tli•n tht DAILY PILOT. jl
;it the animal preserve recently and officials U1ere
say the be asts arc not dangerous to drivers -as
long as they aren't pink.
6
4
2 -5
6
7
8
D
A
I
L y
p
I
L
0
T
c
L
A s s
I
F
I
E
D
-5
6
7
8
MO!ldat, Marth I, 1971 DAILY PILOT 2
11/\ll"'Y PILOT W /\NT ADS
llil I
Gener ii Gtner1I Gener1I
ECOLOGY ENTREE 1----------lrreah air. sunshine and * * * * * TAYLOR CO. *
2529 Harbor, C.M.
546-8640
Thinking of
SELLING?
Let us help, Yre will buy
your house today for it.I
full value. The only ad-
d.lUonal charge is 1% of
tht selling price. No ad·
dltional expense. W•
11eM h.uaMI It doesn't
cost anything to call
and find out--you ·migbt
even save!!
GET
RUMPUS lOOMUS
ThA\'1 Latin for a fun
place to spend free time
and have parties. This
beautiful 3 bedroom
home hu It all! 2 baths
-double garage -
forced alt heat -gor-geous new carpeting
that takes you from the
hard co I d concrete
you've been \\'alkJng on
all day to ... soft-nuf.
fr·pillowy v..1>rlds of toe
l1ckllng comfort -also
a fully paneled rumPWI
room for your after din-
ner houi-5 of reluation
-It's impossible for
any task to be monoto-
nou!l in the exciting
aura of this upgnded
kitchen -All this for
$21,0001 -no down
pmt to vets -call now
and 1tart enjoying life.
ACTION
DIRTY IARCiAIN
Located In Costa r.tesa
off Baker St. This 3 bed·
room 2 be.th home needs
a llttll!' elbow grease t o
makr it ~hine. It's of·
fered for sale at $23,500
11.nd double izarage, large·
fenced yard. clOlie to
schooli; & shopping. It's
all included -see it
today!
FASTER
FUN PLACE
$23,SOD
Herl" you have a charm·
ing J bedroom hon1e in
Costa r.1e11a thafs rea-
dy to be Jived In. Owri·
ers have moved north
lt'avlng It vacant. No
monPy dov.·n to vetJ;;
r.mt lncludlnit ta:xes and
ruurance will be $188.00
mo.
FROM
J IEDROOM
FIXER UPPER
11x37 POQL
$24,150
Hurry on this beauty!
It's locatffi In the Back
B.11y are.11 of Costa l\1esa.
Ju1t paint it and clean
it up, at this price you
can't ml&s -it sold
once lvilhin the first 3
days but buyer didn't
quallfy-6CI CAI..L NO\V.
tt's back on the mar-
ket!
FARROW
HORSES IN
THE CITY
1J.i Serr of freedom of·
fers unequalrd ~ecluslon.
Truly a country atmos·
phere abound!! th I s
quaint back woods oot·
tage. A full family room
Is located to the rear of
the living room -pan-
eled in knotty pine ac·
ccnllng the neat & clean
Interior decor. In the
city 11f Costa l\fesa. on
The Bluff. You'll enjoy
11. soothlnit !:ea brteze
daily -asking $30,000
-8t"e It.
2700 SQ. FT.
OF ,LUXUlY
Thill: 8Mutlfu1 -Sand·
point homf' has been
upgraded In every \\·ay.
Job transfer fortf'K sale.
.Now vacant the ov.•ner
wants action. 4 King
size bedrooms, 2* tlled
baths, sep. fam. room
with bl'lck fireplace.
Sep, form. dining room.
Open air cathednl «II·
Ing. Deluxe shag carnet-
Ing In 11.U rooms. FJoor
to ceiling custom dn.pes
Included. Proff$.!llonally
landscaped a 11 r r> r
$43.000. Nt1 dov.·n to
Vets. See it now!
2629 Harbor Blvd.
546-8640
OPEN EYES.
1.IU~8:30
2629 'lwbo.. t.>1.
•
IRVINE TERRACE
Spacious 2 bedroom luxury borne with 21f.a
baths. Perfect in every detail. $62,500.
439 AVOCADO OPEN I • 5
"Our 26th Ye1r"
WESl:EY N. TAYLOR CO., Realton
2111 Sin Jooquln Hiiis Road
NEWPORT CENTER 644-4911
Gener ii
green gra.5."I are all your!!.
Almost ~ acre youngster'•
playgroWld protected by
aiturdy block v.·alls. Escape
lo the .901itude or this se-
cluded oul-Oe·ll8C bcnlered
with a geolle forest of
shrubbery. MO\'e in and
tum on the liii:bts. this o~n
er made all improvement!!
for you. New anOque gol~
shag carpet and fresh de-
cor thru-<iut. Come .t be
charmed. 'I1utt bedrooms + Dining Room· I~ Baths.
VE1'ERANS SUBMIT: NO
00\\'N 6~ % interest ONLY
129.960. 1-=====;;;;J DASHING DUPLEX
ll!l!lll!ll!ll!lll!l•llll!l=:.. I 'mmec.liate PosnsYen ,. Vacant & read~ 10-,rnlve in.
lAvely to look at with its
rich avocado decor and
1creened in A carpeted lan-
ai. Dt'I~ ownel':ll T\110 Bd·
rm. home plWI $140 month·
ly return lrom your nelah·
bor. Separate concrete drive
for boa! or trailer. A big
children's play yard with
fresh oranges from ya u r
tree! REDUCE YOUR LIV-
JNG EA'PENSE Assume ex·
biting 6% VA FINANCING.
Priced to sell at $32,500.
Evenings can 642-7438
MESA VERDE
PICK ONE
Beautiful home1 -Beautiful
area -Take )OUr pick:
1-SUper sharp 3 + Fam, So
clean it squeeks -$31.500.
2--Corner for boat I: trailer
plus 4 BR & Fam Rm -
$29,!EO.
3--Cul de sac -Quiet &J't'a .
4 BR + Fam Rm-$11.500
+-Separate ~faster Bdnn
plao. 3 BR + Fam -
S28, 7;,o -!>"HA/VA OK.
i-Goll course area -Lara('
master suite -4 BR -
lfuge Fam Rm -$37,500.
FHA/VA OJ\.
Dial 645-0303
IORISI [ Ol.,O\
" ll E A t TO R S
2299 Harbor, Costa }.1eu
HARBOR VIEW
OCEAN VIEW
Entertain your friends for.
mally or informally in thia
terrific 4 bedroom home
1vith formal dining, family
room kitchen nook, 2% balh8
&nd much. much more on
sand dune lor only ...
$72,lllO 67J.85SO
10 THE REAL
'."-ESTATERS
YEEUUK ! ! !
Unmentionably dirty, 4 bed·
rm1 on large corner lot,
sprinkler system on llmer,
v.•lth a wreck of 1 family
room 17xl3. Sacrificed price
bf!low appraisal AND SELL·
ER "'ILL PAY ALL CJ
BUYERS CLOSING COSTS.
Make an offer.
Li1rwin Realty, Inc..
21562 Brookhurst. H.B.
546-5411 1nytimt
YOU'LL BE AMAZED
4 Huge bedrrna, 2 baths,
heavy shake roof. oveni1E<l
kitchen "'/eltt bltns. plus
a REAL family room. Ideal.
ly localed on quiet street
close to all schools includ-
ln& Orange Coast College.
Plenty of room 10 expand
here \\•ilh over 1800 gq, {I.
Full pril-"e only $32, ~. A1l
t e r m s available. Call
5'16-5880. (open eves.),
B/B
tz YEARS OF
REAL ESTATE SEJtVlCE I ;;;iiiiiiii;;i;;;;iiiiiiiiiiliiiii ..
IN THE 1-IARBOR AREA I'
BAYSHORES
FOR FUNI
A 11,.onderful place for boat-
ing, swimming &. just en-
joyiJ'€ We, 3 BR. & family
1m. Price re<.luced to
$-18,500.
675-3000
mn.n ,\ 111:.\rll
llE.\IT\' 1\1'.
ES ' 1;10 ~'5 )000 - - -
BUILDING LOI
For duplex ar tripleX near
commercial zone in Col!ta.
t.lesa. Great polenliat for
investment! Owner flexible
on terms and wlll carry th<'
1st loan with $3125 Jnvtst.
ment. Full price Sl2.50D.
Jr;a.. C0Al1 ~WA~CE
REALTOllS
--546-4141-
1 (Optn Evenings)
Really Company 1
1
TIRED OF
BEST BUY FOR TAXES?
NEWPORT BEACH t..et us show you how to tak r
Macnab-Irvine
f'irsl lime offered. This im-advantall:<' ol neiv LOW IN·
maculatc &. beautilulJy dee-TERESI' rates and move kl-.
orated homt' has everything to your own 4 bedroom, ~
for carefrtt family living. bath tax deduction. Pay )es,,,
4 bedrooms, 3 ba1hs, lam· than renl and build ~ity.J
lly room. form.al dining Thick shag. push·OOtton kif·
room. Beautirully landsca1>-chen, and waiting for you!!'
ed gardt>nll with room for $21,900.
""'' $46,,,. Walker & lee ~
Macnab-Irvine
642-1235
YOUNG
EXECUTIVE HOME
Benuliful :l-i-ty. 4 bdrm .. 21,.,
balh: A·l cond. Beam ceil.,
air-conditionM. 2 Patios.
?r-ofe1.<1ionally decorated. A
reaJ bargain. Walk 10
beach. Only $39,500.
Realtors J
7682 Edinger 1 <7141 842-44S5 or 541).5140 '
HARBOR VIEW
HOMES
A beaut. 5 BR. horn~; ..,et
bar, lOvely shag cptg., aeJr.
cleaning ovens: ready lo
move into! $59,500 • lnclUd·
ing ~land.
CORBIN-No ca.!lh, veterans • not one I
MARTIN cent lAw down to other In-._..._.
vestors. Builder only built ~ ...............
7 homes like this. 3 hed· Coldwell Banker
room5, fam ily room, modern r REAL TORS' 644-7661
kitchen, In the medium 20'1. ~-oco.pgy ....:.......iii ;t4 ACRE BACK BAY;
CALL I ---..-i 2 BR, dining rm, Jge pool.,
Walker & lee 1133-0700 644-2430 d<laohod '"' '°""'· l.ge ":::::::::::::::;,:I .!lhop '>'"/2'l0 elec, lOls ol ex· 2043 Westclifr Or\v{' 1 • tra l11nd. $48,000.
'"·"" o"'" ·111 'PM Vo•v Spod•I Homo PETE BARRffi RLTY .
$24 950 2311 Tustin Ave., N.B.
1 (,'u~lom buill , roomy J bed-I
3 Bdrm. + D•n I rm, I~ kl!. w/bl!ns• combi. 642-5200
No down .. 1~rma, •·Pride or rMlion dining & rec roon1, I BE FIRST i
ownership i hr o u i h • lge living rm w/frplc. 2 Full Under consll'Uction see the~
out. SJOCIO In 11ddecl luxury baths. EXpensh•e crplll, plans at 1033 Marinen Drive 1
feature& in lhi~ beautiful drps. Heavy shake roof. Dover Shores 4 & 5 Bed~
home. Lar&1' rooms. Nat· Beautifully landscaped back rms 4 i. s ' baths select!
ural \\i>Od cabinets. Open )'lU'd & patio for entertain· you; own colors I.' CUJtoml
til 9 PM S.10.1720. Ing. $32.500. details. All with out1tanding1
TARBELL 29SS Hubo• Lachenmyer Rlty vi ..... Roy J. w ... d. RI~.'
Newport Beach 1 Call 646-39'18 Eves: 64&-:'1649 646-lijQ, Open Daily.
$3',9SO 3 BR CONDOMINIUM ]
l\.1arlner1 School, park, libra. 10162 Bev•rly Dr. H.B. In choice section of r.tonti
ry &: \Ve!!tclifl f'lllUI near Unique, 4 Bdrm, lrf·lf'vel cello completely redecoral~
this delightful 3 81\ &. den. ed i1ieludlfl&' new carpet5.l
2 bil, .. Harbor ~Highland! t:c:1:·~r!~! 'PrlCed DeloW market.' Act
home. R1tchen 11•/ BIR & O. fasc on this one.
BBQ, &. OW, All stainless Thruoul $20 500
steel. Call i\1r.f-1arrL~ .• South Beautiful yard. Patio PERRON , '41--1n1+
Cout Real Eslate, 545-8424. New Listing /
EASTSIDE 3 BDRM
CU!e older. h01T\f: near Coun-
try Club &: Golf course, hrd·
wd firs, frplc and many fnrlt
tree1. 10% 0o~11 or FHA/
VA terms. Askinr; .. ,
$24,SOO
$41.900 I I
BUY IT!! TRANSFER ,
')lltsa\c~r :Rca1ir
546-5990
YOURP.RO~,..
10 SPEClALISTS
Property Men19ement
Reel Est1te -
STEPHENS & KAYE
645.0122
PERRON 642·1n1 I Enjoy El99once .--I Thlt ~ just wrapg Ill FORECLOSURE * BAL.BOA COVES * charm aboul you BeauHful Here's a lender'• foreclo&ure
\Yaterfronf homt w/Alip for I 3 BR. 2 Ba ·PBCf'Setltr for )'OU. Lovely 3 BR. .l
30' boar. 3 Br. 1\1 ~. llome on one '0r the finest family rm .. 2 bllths. Beaut
FORTIN CO. &42·5000 •tree.ti in ~feu. Vt:rde, Call entry h11Jt lmmed. popeu.
REDUCED $5000 IOl' &A>r. $.17.500. i\tlnlmum down. ea~1t By Owner: vacant Roy McCi1rdle Re1ltor MORtlAN REAL TV
3 br. 2!~ ba, like new. t:>0,000 1810 Nt'A'l)Ort Blvd., C.M, 673-6642 67s+t.5
"~"" S41-n29 I IRVINE TERRAC
3 BR, 2 &, fam rm, din I " BR . 4 ba. Bw.iti.ful 'Vin'.
'mi. Liv .rm, 14!rv 1>0rth. ts )'OU ad tn the• ctaWbed l1t '1lme otreM!.
frplc. $35,500. own tr s1s:;,mo
962.-&160. SECTJON? Somtone I 1 j Home Show Re•ltors
NO matter Whal It a, you walchlllJI' for It. Dial ( "AnnchaJr Hou~·huntin&''
can sell tt with a DAILY I 642-:J6'73 lodAY! 675-7225 I
PILOT WANT AO! 6-i:-t.678 , 1\"hile f.l~flhn.n1 Dime-A-LlnP
•
.... ~ ..... & •• • ••••• . . . . . . -. . . . • •••••••••• 1 ......... l '"' .. . ' ' . -. . r • -.. •• • • . .. . ' . . . " '
Iii DAILY PILOT
Everyone Hos
Som eth in g Tho t
So me one El se Wo nts
DAILY PILOT CLASSIFIED ADS
The Biggest Mark~tplace on the Orange Coast -Dial 642·5678 for 'fast Results
You Can Sell It,
Find It, Treda It
With a Want Ad
Gener•I
* * * * * Attention Realtors
.SOUTH COAST REAL ESTATE
*
ls pleased Lo announce lhe opening of their
second office at 1500 Ad.ams Blvd.. Costa
Mesa on ApriJ isl, 1971. This office \\1iU be
located on the ground floor adjacent to the
main entry of the multi-story professional
building.
\Ve are presently seeking 8 experienced and
professional men or won1en (brokers or as-
sociates) to staff this exceptional location.
Should you be contemplating a change
please contact Al Black at 54~424.
BONUS PLAN TO 84 %
* * * * * General General
Co•t• Maia
OWN THE EARTH
Buy this liltle home on :kl,190
!IQ. 11. ot good terra Jirma
in Ea!I Costa Mesa. Add
Huntington Buach
Save $$·U-Finish It
3 Br -On~ $18,000
1~1 1 -..,., •.
I
1 Irvin• I Newport S.1ch ==== l ~come Property
JUST WHAT. Jo'INE !'AMIL\,. H0"1E OFFICE BLDG.
166 Houses Unfurn. Business•
Opportunity 200 Gener•I 1--------You've been looking for·, Good H"ights area. 3 BR Net income $26.~ EXCEPTIONAL
30$
• 2200 Sc:i . ri. I & lamilly i·m. 2 Bath!8.RHug~ Single tenant "AAA" OPPORTUNITY 3 ~.··!un~·.~leeld~
•.. .,. _ _, separa e master . • Price ;270,000 Now available in .....,.,,. atta. '"""".a .. v ... , Y
·• at. .... room~ t",.,.lct. S.rvll" po re h ·. ,,_ •-..... dra Dbl six or seven rental unllll and , e ,,, n-11 ·r ~lutns 10% on cash lnv. Amerlca.n Ent.erprik Jg ere. en, ca.rpe~ •uu pe-s. · Al'l' you a hand)' man·. Fi.n-~ .pa is
1
.. garage on alley, enclosed guage, fenced ya.rd. Rent let the lenan!s pay oll the ish 1 l'OO<n ai; 8 BR .. play + e 2 t"'ireplaCf's ard $35 000 W. R. DUBOIS INC. ating and developing a nil· on month to month at $135
mortgage. Price is $27,500 rm., dark rm., ere. !\later· e Fantastic View~ c?'RAHAl\t' REALTY 646-Z4l4 * ~1'>-7166 * Uonwide networlr. of inde-th Call'
::, ~ll~~il:~.'~il, back lals are there. Oean mod-,• C~tous palio ISALE, owner, Newport 5 units on 2 lotJ, $49,750 :~e=to~~~:"~~ :~ ,l LEE, Rtaltoh
rrn C!harm .. Lor&• room.'· I • mu11mal lndscp;:. cart I !Bluffs). 2 BR. •Plit level oonsisting of three 2 BR St.5-0t65 W lk & L L h t s arklitl All thi 10 onl $11500 .homes & Ont' 1 &: 2 BR du ct! -Nationally famous ~=-,----,,,-,,---=I a er ee us carpe ing. p g ' r 'I . ' Spanish home choice gr-ttn-JIUNT'S SNACK PACK! i BR cottaje ulU pd •••• $13 ~II el~c. kitcbm with Span· \\'on 't you ,,tet us ibow it to belt view, $26,500. Dys: duple:(. By ov.·ner. Bnice 1'1anutact"--' by Hunt-Wes--50 Realtor!! ish liled floors. Reo-stal you today. 6-12-4llO, Evts & \\'knd.<;; l\l. Halling, :l48-6 ;::;, ILlcu 1 BR home furn•••••• ~J-
"7"" Har'"-, BJ,d. 01 Ada-" chandeliere<I dining '"" (i eel h II .,. ·-p . . al 1 jj7-3169 son Foods, l nc. You've seen 2 BR C.M. tot/pet OK•• $110 ~•;JU '"' """ . • • • • · • ..-u•J. ruicip son Y· It advertised on T.V. Over 3 BR vacant kids OK·· $130 ~.)..9,19) Open 'lil 9 PM Stained mlI'rored . glaSl!. :.!-• r I CHAR~flNG hilJ~ide home Industrial ProJMrtY 161 2;)() million cans already 4 BR vac. k1~/pels OK $110
EASTSIDE TREA SU RE car garage. Boat door. Walk v.·/view, Newport J-1 ts, FIBERGLASS l\tfg:r.1 & sold. Ar; an independent dis-2 BR horse ranch ...... $140 S23.~. Quiet traffic lref' !:v.~h'rc:~~ J:w~~ ~~~ Univ. Park Center, Irvine :>48-7983 \Vood.,..·orken wel<..'Onle. Ex· tributor you arc your own STAR*LET 776-7330
s1reeL This beautiful J Hu rry. Ca1l 1n4J 962_568.i Ca ll Anyt1n1f' 833-082i> Newport Height• tra hatard lire sprinklerl!. l.ioss, free to seltct your own J BEDROO~I. 2 bath, patio,
bedroom home just sparkles 37:50 sr & up for rent. \\'Orkin,. hOurs. You stock 1 ~-~~-. ~~---L•gun• Beach CHAR,l\1ING nearly ne\\I ~ Ashwill-Burke, · 534--0232 and collec.t money from new ~1!11 cleaning 1 e cu r It y available for 11'11!: nlOney. -""" Assume low \ntere11t loan I bdrms., 2 baths It. 1an1ily Lots for Sale 170 coin operated dispensers. deposit, 645--0249 after' 'l
or no down to Vets. Call $291950 rm. Large kitchen v.•/elec. Ali locations are lndustrial p.n1. ask for Dan Lee or
"'" ~·24 Sou'" c I 2 "•"-m.'· l "• bath!! & I bltns. Lovel y new carpets. or commercial; furnished 54:,...9491 days .... ,....,, .. ' ... .oas ~vu ll BAYCREST LOT -"""=~~~====-1 Realtors. den. Excellent ocean view. Stone lrplc. J Garages, elec. and installed by us, fl-tan or LANDLORDS _ O\VNERS
TitANSFERRED. 3-4 br hm 19131 Brookhurst Ave. Under consti·uction. time to , door. See this before you Best stttet . lar&:e lot. woman o.k. Aee no faclor PROPEltTY MANAGEJtS
•;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;-;;;;;;; 'd '-lluntlnglon Beath sele"I intei•ior ,-J•r• & buy. $39.500. Not leasehold . hurry! it you qualify. Can he start· \:\'e v.•ill "fer tenants to """U l lrg fam rm, xtra wi e "''· .... '"" GRAllA'I REALTY 6"24 ,_ Jess lhan J yr-" old. Nr stylt'~. " -ro-l4 Arnold & Freud ed part time and expanded 1ree of charge .•. ?rlany
Catholic Sehl. s.C, Pla7.a BRASHEAR REAL TY into a full t!me business. desirable tenanl!I on our
loan to tiual. buyl"r . **ANNOUNCES .,//'0~4 ,,,_, Reat E1t1ta. .&I PLAN 1'\'0 Sl.99a.o0 ALA Rentals.
& airp:irt, Assume 6'1 VA '47-8507 ~Lo Ja,, ~ .388 ~~,:~·· C.i\I. PLA N ONE Sl.250.00 waiting li1t.
5-W-1959. Opening of New Office , REAL ESTATE Gentr1I .1111 4 CE"°IE'I'ERY lots .. Blue PLAN rnREE $3.995.00 NEARLY new, 2 bedroom 2
:-.Jesa dtl i\far, owner, ~·elJ 17931 D &aach Blvd, Spruet! secUon. tlarbor Rest fCASH REQUIREDI 1 bath home. Format dinin&:,
kept J BR, 2 BA, lrplc, Huntington Beach 11~ Glenneyre S1 A f I 1 SO J\femorial Parle S 1 O O . For pcrsonaJ interview ln carpets &. drapes, tirtplace,
PRESTIGE WATERFRONT HOMES
S Linda Isle Drive on over 10,000 sq. ft. cut-Oe-MoZcite Brashear, Broker 494-9-173 ~9-0316 cre.ge or s• • ! 548-3075 your area, "Tile: American 1859 Port Abbey, Newport
J ust compleied 4 BR., 5 1f.t ba. home w/fa m.
rm. & study. f.1a gnificent 39 ft. waterfront
liv. rm . w/{rpl. & \!.'et bar . $167.406.
sac lot. Prof. lndscpd & eves: 968-1178 I I * ACRE FOR HORSES Enterprise l: Distributing Beach, 6'4-2013. Open Sat. GREAT * Choice multiple zoned en 2730 s•· decorated. Hrdv.·d rai!M "-r••· 't•' ·y ··-•·. ~· •m H mpany: .... mmons &: Sun 2 to S. ...., ·-" ... ...., ..... """"" WEEKENDER Costa Mesa acreage 20771 Acacia, Santa Ana ts. 0 u T _.::...°"~·-"-------I floo r, luxury rrpld. f"HA Eleanor Baker eves: 833-20.:;3 n...-r. 6 7 3-2 2 5 9 I e v e Tov.·er \Vest, a u. e.xas
5\4 'lr. S33,900. !>46-5S9l __ Near v1~1oria Beach under. llan"ta 2' talit• ~·~723. 'Q20? • Inc lude your phone 4 BR. bltns, crpts, drps, pr.,
For compl•t• information on all homes &
lots, please call:
pass. Vu.•w, low ma1nt. 1. 'JP. :t u•...-v be Fncd yd. Kida, sinelts, pe ts
Open House Everyday CUSTOM 2 STORY Bdrn1. plus room for ex. &l2-6.'i60 Mountain, Desert, \ num r. OK, $21D.
3 br on immense ocean view Huge citrus lrec !il!ed 101, pan!ion. $27.000. Resort 174
1
Money to Loan 240 Blue Beacon*. 645-0111
BILL GRUNDY, REALTOR Apartments for sale 152 lot Cul-dl'.'·M.C, lots of trtes. 3 bedrm, 3 b~. beaut crptd, ENGLUND REAL ESTATE
S24.9:)Q. 1040 Lindtn Pl. c.rit drpd, all bltni: including 318 Thalia, Laguna Beach LIDO ISLE . i\Iust sacrifice, 3 BR, J3~ Ba, l yr old 1st TD Loan 3 BDR.!i_ ~Y~~·· ~k
Owner. Daya: 5·18.4192: TV'~. No down (,a or FHA. 494-8098 6 beach ap~. All Jurn. 6 ~tucco home at 3500' eleva-like )' a na. i;
833 Dover Dr., Suite 3, N.I . 642-4620 -~• ,,.e Real
Estate 011
Precedl119 Page
Freedom
Home
$21,000
Located on lovely Arbo1
Street. \Vlth a huge back
yard and a i:arrige. (},1•11t'r
will Sf'll FHA ternis. \\'IJQ';-
FIRST• C11ll
Newpor t ,,
646-tlll
(anytime)
SWISS CHALET
SPOTLESS
Sn1ell 1hc pines -A~ t-ozy
a~ it ii v.·rre hidden in 1he
Alp.~. Ankle deep carpeOn&
~\en in the toun!rr kirchrn.
l big .bedrooms -ramily
room -Li\lt out.side on
Jar&e 20¥20 patio encirc\l'd
b;,• wt:U kept g -r o u n d ~
Sehools -College & Shop.
ping -Oose. Only $31,:ilO.
Hurry. dial fi.U.-0303.
IORISf E OL'O' '" PCJILT01/)
2299 J-lARBOR, COSTA l\tESA
COOL POOL+
Chal'ml11g .J BR, 7 BA are;i,
hoine In prime location. Mrd.
wd firs, crpts r.:. drp.~, hug,.
32x26 pool. Needs !!Omt' paint
& your i reen thumb. 0\\'ner!!
tramt. FP S24.9.;D. Cl or
Fl-IA 1rrn1s. Call 8~7-1221 .
OK, brk., $200 a nwnth. NO
I General Eves: 642-Uj2. Priced at appraisal. Call cat· earaee. 1'i~ loan. Lease lion nr King's Canyon 6~~-µ, rN'l'EREST
··--------·JE•st Bluff 8~7-8j()i, Laguna Niguel ' land lo yr. 2018. Owner. Sl5,000 or will trade for 2nd ·yo Loan FEE. S4G-l720. • ~·Pl!ll"IP':lr?lr!~!l j 642-4097 days. local property. AllO l'i1 A. $160 3 BR, R/0, new crptJ,
TAX REFUNDERS -------1 m If. w0 *29 MONARCH BAY* 14 v Ch . u .. ' .,,;1. 842-1860 d,Ps, Kid•.""' OK. EXCLUSIVE AGENTS -1'41: ! I BY OWNER ery armmg nits, I T b d · Bl Ba * 645-0111
SALES. LEASES l,!~·~·~·l~!~J-~l~~:~~~ Bcaur. Colonial trl·level !I 1 iood location._ Prine. Only. I Real Estate Wanted 184 '4l~2J71 ase on S:~tl ue aeon DANDY DUPLEX ... ..... u11n BP.., 21,!i BA, .sundec'k. fan. Owner 644-03l::i. EEOEO 3 BUR.l\f. + family rm., full
'
"-"-m ''"" u·i·i C 1 I HOMES N St'rving Harbor area 21 yrs. dininz rm., built-Ins., brk. cru .. ,., ,_,, .. 1as1Jc whlle water vielV. :t-ommerc • Si1ttler Mortgage Co. $390 a month. NO FEE, · Cheaper Than Rent ,., ntw. CnmpJ ,.,.,,,, '" Property 151 336 E. 11th strttt Newpon . 540-mo. 1n~; On1\'n
$2!,950
SHARP SHARP
1 U111u on f lo"A't'r Stl'eeJ
$ll,950
TERRIFIC TRIPLEX
Present Income .$420 mo.
tliA appnii!a.1 & sales price
$39,500
FANCY FOURPLEX
I Srudio 11• 1 . '': SA ('al'h
$48,000
Qlt-ins inc vacuuni systeni For transferees. \Ve art !he ..... ii:i.iii.i.ii;i.iiiiiii;i...,. CHARMING l.ai:-una Bearh e:i1clusive agents for a na. 3 BR. 2 ba. Bllns, new crpt!,
na t..-111 this ~UP<'r sharp l bf'drm & sauna halh . 3 ca r i;:ar. stores" apt . on Co.ast Hwy. iionaJ corpor.ttion . Call Jocal Cash Fast I drps, frplc, Bring the tam-.; 2 bath Toii·nhouse. Prime i,;:t1me m i. au!o spnnkler. Lo 80• X IOJ' 11 12 j\lan dlx 1 1 t to a ey. agtnl before you li&:t·841·66 · 1 • ily . $200. ~~·e ~~~e~:h~e!20~~' ~is Yto ~:1~~~n.00S~~~:: ~r will finance at 7.::i%.
1
\VANTED: 3-4 BR. home for 1st & 2nd Trust Deeds Blue Beacon* 645--0111
i;hae crpts & drps. Ne"1;ly I 499-4198 or 83J.J4oO Re ro er. 1~ -family in Cdi\f fr om Jo~REE APPRAISALS , J1Tj SPACIOUS 3 BR, pr ..
painted inside. Large paUo BY OWNER: 4 + 1 hr, aJonomi.cs_ Corp. 6 ;)..6,()()1 O\VNER. Fee simple, prin-Costa Mes• Investment 1 huee yd, Children, pets weJ.
Ir: pool privilege11. f'ull price IJ4 ba honie on landscped Condom1n1ums clpals only. 1·713/696-TllS. 541-nll i1nytime come.
.$20.950. GI or FHA terms. lot. Compl pvt pool, cov.?red for sale 160 I Blu. Bei1con * 645-0111 F.~i:S:01h;'R_1~~AN ean s.i1.1m. patio adj to house, fully LAZY LIVING j j~ Money Wanted 250 Corona del Mar .c·rpted. all bltns. cabin FinaMial •
T'OTAL payn1P11I lot· 1his plafrm above dbl iiar. \Valk J BP., 2111 BA, wit h custom 1 NEW_ ~Star i\.1obi~e Com-HOUSE wrnt PATI0-2 br.
sharp l brdroon1 home Is I" .••hi. 10 ,,,.,n. lo o•h. crnt ~ drp• & IUlly e••lo~A .. 1 mun1ty needs 2nd f.1na11C1ng. U 1 . .__. ~ " , ,. ~. . "" ·'~ I "IOBILE ENVlRO'"•• ENT, 2 bo.. conserva ve coup e
~ B 1 .,1_-1-1 or sing e . ...,.,., mo, t u t .
2U4 Vista Del Oro
Newport Beach 644-U33
Fountain Valley
$116. Subjec1 to FHA loan $36,j(l(J, 49:,..,-174.lt aft 3 pm. 11r i\·ate palio. 2 "'~t· •••· . " ""' I \ •~ 1
\\ith 61~ annulll pert'entaJ:!' 171~1 Beach Olvd., Htgn Sch Lido Isle xlni area a rraJ buy ai usiness 200 nc . .,.. "'::i <1.W Dahlia . •
Newport ralt. All appliances ~uch as Open 'lil 9 p.n1. $2-1,9.)()? · Opportunity I
,.,·asher, dryer, relrlg:eraror BUY -OF-THE-WEEK * REDUCED * Larwin Realty, Inc. I I~ 3 BR. 2 ba. unr. S29J lease. R~~TaJ~I Yi~~J~dree~.· S\~~r~i; This ~ Mdroom 2':: balh hnmac. ;, BR., family rm. 21562 Brokhur1!, H.B. BEHIND-EVERY ' HcMe&forbnt ii! H~';:~1.;:~1 ~~~-675-7225
F1irview ~1 d 11 ha ... 4.:; Ft. Lot street-to-54~5411 anytime . .
your do"'" payment -SELL· "ea crw on1e s """'" 166 I SUCCESS STORY Costa Mes• 646-8811 ER ANXIOUS, ANYONE priced to lit'!! lhis week. street. By app't. only Income Property ,..._,,.,,_.,,.-..,,....,.-~-I
QUA1..JF1ES. ~!her homes in 11rea he\•e s93.750 IS A MAN Hause1 Furnished 300 2 BR. Gar. Pallo. Crpt1,
(1nytime) w Jk & L . oldfrom SJOOOto S2000hiah. LIDO REALTY INC. 8 UNITS I drps, stove, retrig. Quiet ....... ..,, ....... """""'""'"' a er ee f'r. Tbi:it ~omc is priced at 3377 Via Lido 673--7200 LONG BEACH WHO GRABBED General tropica1 setting for adults SPANISH STYLE VA •pprru"I "l.10.9'0 and Mes• Verde Clo" to boy AN OPPORTUNITYll 190 _ tn'IL PD Yny Ai boh only. 1 blk JO ,..,, ;160-Real1or~ 11·111 sell "'1lh nt\v fl[A or f; bachelor unLts 1 •• I Ideal for sruden1s.' sm pe~ $169/mo. 6.f6...4430
5"ij.().i6.i Opl'n 'til 9 P:\I \I.\ l1nancin~. If you want to FIXER UPPER ., A d h · th I t k I DARLING colt g~ 2 'Bit Bcauulully kept ~ Bedroon1 1----~ ~ . l bedroon1 n ere s a oppor un· o . a . .
i b lh ho .1h 1 BOAT OR. TRAILER b<' !he lucky Oil"' lo buy 1his R!:'ctnlly recondinonerl !ly! UIJ Snack Shop vend-Blue Beacon* 64S-0111 fam. nn. firepl , patio. Avail -•1 mo 1w1 a~c Su""r sham 4 BR 1,.,,1c honir hon1r. 1hcn ea.II nQ\\'. Lrnder has reposses~ed lh1s 1111; machines. I pool. S2ti 642-3645 o r lam1 y room, push rarpet. • •·· .,.. .,. 5 bcdrm, 1 ~ sq. 11. illellll Excel!en1 rcnlaJ record A proven_ wini:er in the Cost• Mesa J 673-6(1.14 '
ing. i;parkling bltn kilchen, on lg cor lot. ':'-1"1 lndscpg, l' Verde homr Needs nuijor $61,200 ero~·1ng $5 b1lhon a ye11r ,.-~~,.--7""-:---~I
and rantasllc tovered patio lb.:40 CO\' pal10. Clo~ 10 surgery . Jender liays tut I market. One of thr ff'\V EXTRA iih11rp 3 bedrn1, 2 2 Br. Duple:ii;. Ganre. No
"'ith massivP stone BBQ. school, IW'.'W ,•hag Ac1•bplg, 961--4471C!<!:J546-1103 market~ left wherr. the in-bath It. [amily, Crpt!, drps, pets. Adults. $144/mo 7'13 .,., ,~ 1 . drps, water :ta tcner. ar-·_::-a\\•ay 111 pri«. Submit dependent operator doe& bltns k lully furnished. \V, \Vilson. 5'8-2802.
...,_,, ·"' -assu1ne ow mter-. S.ll j()() NO DOWN TO VETS YOUR bid. Low down pay. the lion' Ii share of the busl· Near So. Coast Shop';". ;o,,,.-;,,.-==7"""'"'"',---c1t loan or FHA/VA NO gai~ at ' · e t Do ·1 d 1 all ll · -... SHARP Eastsidt, 3 bedroom. DO\VN. Terms available. Elhs·Schr.ader Rltrs, Ow.1 a triplex. Your only m n ·Re ~ e•:K'i~sl er1· 1 ~iis. Snack Shops are a l C"e1nter. ~vail for lease at Sito per month
Call ~;,.&l:!t 892-6606 ca.sh outlay is closine costs IJ\~e 8 !ors a topen I proven business opµortun-<!." Y • $2:(). . month. Call Bill Fulltr, Realtor 546-0314
and in1pounds. Choice Co1ta : ""t'~.J REALTORS Hy. with a ""'oven line of :>IG-llJl, Heritage Rtalton , :-=~-'~~-~--Low Down! Low Intl ,,. 1 1 3 BR h dbl I pvt i\lcsa location. East o! Har-~?'.AA Doii· sii'if. I SINCE l!M;) nationally famous brands open eves. !!!, gar, 'I
NEW SHAG CARPETING bor Bl\'d Lt\'r. in one and 1 -, k . n . , .. oan _, 6 73.4400 of confections thnt s.ell Laeun• Beech fenc'd Joi• stove SllO, 1S'J8
ln1mat·.:: BR. lgc dPn. f'OV rf'nl 2 Olhei s Good think-i·e nev.·. J br. fani. Vacant i themselve~. If you can 1n·1 i\Iaple St. 54S-6680
pa1 io. s:m Total prr mo . int!~~ \Vell, 1 gutss' If ~ $28,000 FP. 499-1901, 496-39 19 , . ve11t as hltle as $600 lo *STUDIO COTTAGE * 12 BR iar erpts ~rps
Unrlcrpricerl. ,.0,,., ....... ,. I· •he ,,-•Jee I Newport Beech 14 UNITS, 1 .)T 01d. Corner ~1500 and 10 hours ab"''~k F'UrtNJSHED I ll»-S,l60 ·1 "hild' 0 k ' HAFFDAL REAL TY ' "'' " " • • lot l-3 DR 2 tsA 1'.rplc· I 1n you r 011'n car to E'g 111, · . • · ... • EXECUTIVE 11nv tirni: r11.JJ us. Ne1,· li1ws 2.2' BR, z' BA l nicel ' you can build a bu~inrs1., Ai·~i~tic_ studio rot!age A! 54S-1405, 6-'6-6762
CONDOMINIUM 8l2.4·10:i Evt~: :>4 1·2·M6 n11.gh1 make you r.Hgiblr. SC:ADS ·.SCADS f • • • y Your income is comn1C'n-Vu:roria Be11ch. All "'OOd E Bl
in ~les11 Verue. Next 10 Goll BLDR'S Sae1·i!ice-Span. gtyle w lk & L . Income Units Gi1lere tu~. i, ~:·· S!6~BA. 4 .pvt suralr \1·lth your desire to paneled, skylights. !J'plc. .,..,•~•~t.,.._u_ff _ _,._.,..oo-_I
Course. 2 s!Ol"' l BR 21 ~ nu CUlltom 4 Br. S32,:;QO, a er ee :'.:IC't: US !Ol' the BEST selec· i~~ !'i-. p1 . I J. n~o. inc. succeed lhrOURh hard work 5185 i\tonth 4 BR fam rm ftnced View , • -11~ d Lo d d / 1 1· · 1 "-h .•. )(). · O. Box 21•· Cdi\.f j yand conedsclentlous service. MISSION REALTY 49-l--0731 Ava·,·1 '!•r. 1,:. l400/mo. •--.· baths, Inrcrcom. Spacious . .JJU n. a e w xtrall. ion in t W'! ""'ac area. COST 1 " aa
d;.-,··g & 1,.,.,·ng room. 11 ., Shakes. f'rpl. Crpt thruout. _ Reallors BDRi\.1S. PRICES A '-iESA I ou nr. no exper ence, Newport &aach Rt fs req'd 644-1627 "" 2 !\I H rbo 81 d 12 Garden 2 Br houses. 12 you mak1> no .personal sales :--.,-;-·=-,,-----I Yours for the prief: $;.G,;;oo, Sprnklrs. lndscpd, In ( g . '·. a r Vd: .1' A ams 3 -bach. $42,j(]() garages 12 patios Income call$. We "'Ill train you, Fountain v.11.v
\\'ill srll furnished. See at ~0223 Pheasant Ave. J-l.5.!}.191 Open 1119 P j\f 3. 2 ~47,500 $19361 'mo SZ3o00 d counsel Y!>u, 11nd stt~re FOR LEASE 302~ Club House ci~clr. 537--0380 Sl8,450. QUJF.T 2 bedroom 3. 2 Sl9 :iOtJ O &1£.4-t3ll J, own. your loc11.1Jon!!. You !!erv1c-e Beautifully furnished, A sPK· FOR lse, lmmac 3 RR, ]* " h 1 · 2 • 2 1,9·:.,,,, l wner. · U1em, and earn the profits iaJ 2 BR, den, 2 patios. Clor.e ba, new shag CJll• & d-•. ~·I0-8i99 ror app1. Call A11 IHuntington Beach ome on corner .ot wllh ~ .,.,., If .,. .\driir. 1 lot!! /.· lol~ of fnnt lrtt!!. 3. 2 13 Avii.il \ ~'-ioo LAG Sch, 3 units, nr beach.j }~ourse, · 1 td 1 1 fo beach. S450 Mo. or make frplr. bltn5. S240 m o .
• --All blln!!, dble gor, dining 4 . 3 Oceanfl'Onl S'IO·~ 0 11•ner ~a:;s sell. Need Y<?U re nter~!!l n m-offer 96S-9543 or 213/241-1581
•I
\out h ~ {. oa st
=
MESA DEL MAR BITS OF SPANISH · .. ,,,.,, SlO 000 down 10 hand! provtni: your 1nrome Rnd 1 ·
1
· · 11nrl e.'l:cellent . residenlial 4 • 3 Bayf1011t $210.000 4~96:19 Bkr '· 1 your llfr i;tyll', fill out the JEAN ·SMITH, RL TR Huntington Beach
;1141 Beach 81\d., Mtgn Bch o .... ·ner $t:llinR beautHul i\leM1 area. 01vner 11111 sell for 6 unita, 2 Br. SW.000 rouool'I bt'lcn1'. 400 E. 171h St., C .. ,1. _ ~n 'iii 9 p.ni. Del i\lar homr . 3 Sl!:dl'ooms, GIANT 4 BR-$28,500 as lo'"' as 10 Pf'!Tt'nt dov.·n. : BURR \\'HITE P\IT parly 11:ants 16 to 20 , - - - - -~3255 + 3 BR, 2 bt, bllns, frpl~.
2 bath!!. large: Jiving roon1 Call :N>842~ South Coast REAi.TOR 61.i-4630 unils from owner, Newport/ D-4 Houus Unfurn. 305 1 fenctd yd, 1ar. Close fb BEACH UNITS 1<.1lh fireplace. Spacious R!:'alto1-,. j 2!XJI Ne\i·poi·t Blvd .. NB l\-1esa area. :l40.6TS2 NATIONAi.LY bch & schools. Chldrnfpetok
11 renla) unlJ.t close to beach.o kitchen "'ilh gas builrins. Spanl.~h \\'a11ed Iron .:111e ADVF.RTISED BflAA'OS General Refs. ~ mo. 536-9672
-\V'ater softl'.ni'~ forced 11·ir ·courtyard ~n~. 4 kl11tr·11l2Cd dh•blQJl or Uil Nt\VJ)Or1 ShOr~.-. fUll tl!IP. 1275 Prorit t>rlve ~ • l Bi', $2lll. Drapes, ftneed Xlnt incomt of 11600 mo. 11 heaune, v.·all to .,..·au carpel. bedrooms. 21! b11hs. \Valk.in Dft.111'18, Tl'xRs 75247 1 \\tAN'S 00~1AIN·Yd for yard, iarli't. Near ace.an.
s;:;:iragts. On!y S yi·s old ing and drapes lhru our. close:\11. Vaulted «llinl 8. d~-Q Ji\"\. { -f) i=trQ.• I Rm interested in morP fn. pet. Stv/refr, cpll!, $90 536--0346 .
• 139.~. 30 ,1 d••· Double garage and tovercd r.tassive fan1lly 1'00m wll)I \:)~ )..'"tJ }..~J.. ~ )J ;:::> formatlon about m11klng ALA Rentals e 64:>3900 ;-a;;:---;;:,;:::::-7;7-,,,---,,i ~ I 1 th di b I 2 BR. Un furn. 1 ~~ bllc t&
CALL ~ 64•·l41• patio. s.11.j(](), .).)T.T3t5 Cl'llCkling k'~'e~lllce.l.ai..fl~Jl:O The Puzzle with 1h• Bui/I-In Chuc,le ~e~~~); ~vee1tv~~r ~~d 'S'.8 RF.ALLY 'NICE 1 Br beach, $165/mo. Leaal!, \::!.L CUSTOM gourmet ·1 c en. u ry hOUl'S p!'r week -"nlirP time .. ~h·{ref, cpt/drps, enc! 1ar Rers. 536-8680.
......... FOURPLEX'S r.entrr. Patio. 3·CAR GAR· O•t0rrano-lttl.rs of tti. ( ) y can Invest S600 in Sl\.1. lfilTY O""'n llnu,so• .. SAl·Swi S7t.l'llV\ AGE. Play y11.rd for I.ht kid~. fovr ~mbt.d Wtll'ds be· 11 rourp_ ,\L\ Rrn!al~ e 64.>3900 l ~l~rv~l~n-e,..-------·i
N t ,.. "'"" Only 3 yr11. old. Lo\v do1l'n. low to forin four ailflpl• wordt. ( l t r11n in\'"'' •1~ Jn Ii ·\GUN,\ 2 BR 2 ._ home N~v • B" 2 BA -·· 11r N'twport P••I Of let .ttllt lhlaria \Vay. 1'.'t\\'J)On " ~ oJ\N ..., "" ~· .J ·~ ~·t' .. ---B h ' 00 l\1uR1 :Woe for yourself al !hi:\ T A C R E p I a rout,. . I Nlct ''itw, Child, -1. ,,1,· drps, hld Q)mtn. '-i ;_ INCOME 11 c :"II. 'lsck 557-87 . 213· low. low S28.500. ~turry and 1'' .. -l I n-.. .......,. ..
o:l rum bachelor units. Cloae l!Ql.':'03U. tall lTl41 962.5585,. j j' j j j &mf' ............................... ~i'~ .. S~~con * '4S.Olll E!o:l~0663Mr;~f~rh e~~~:
ID K .. ~n • shopp1na: in N"w. \--*A ·FRAME * . . _ . _ . Address ..................... .,_.,_l
port lkach. $28,(00 • ~·ou 2-Si:--. INarh honie xtnt cond.. City S SPACIOUS 2 Br. Stv/retr ;-:<;;;---:;-,;-;--;,;.-,;-,,--,-,-,
own the la nd! 13 AR. J:\O b11 2 car a:ar. V A ff I £ I lj.· ........ IAI P ...... Zip -· c/d, encl gar. l\ld!. $14S. •;!~· 2 BA ... CWverdale"
Geerge W illiamson , Bl1n.s. :.;"'"' "'"· 133.900 -Pho~ t \ ALA Rentals • 643-3900 Privil.. $300/mo,
Realtor CAYWOOD REALTY I I jl 11 Df'pl. •3836D 1 FA~Ul.IES \V~lcome. Pets ,--•-°'"-=--"-'-~2996"'-*--1
67l-4350 64S.1Sf.4 Eves 6300 \\'. Coa~t llwy ., ~B 19131 Brookhur 1 A\'C. l FLO\\'&R. Shop + -4 BR all:. 2 BR. CID, fncd yd ~agun• Beach
REPOSSESs10Ns-5~1290 llun1in1;1on 'Bt1tch T U M 0 N I ~ Tkey tell a bout 1i,. d umb houst, rood lease, Bu!!y cor-As~.Rental.11 • 6-JS.lrol USJ. Beaut 3 BR 2 BA cus-
s ......... 11 .... cw11n hOmc.s. '°''" Cerone del Mar SALE by 0,,.-r. l BR •--•. I I I' , troff:.. cop ho nt'r ~ " )'T'S groWing Mk'-tom bl1. Bfams thNtiut ..-. .... ,. ,,., llQ{n I ,. . ... w gove ovt ce1s. Appt . 6-12-4101 STEPS to oce:an 3 Br aar. Firtpl, immac, SU-1449 ew
newly paintl'd' e.rpe1cd. 2 DREAMY LOCATION crpts. all eltt bit-In!, t.f '--L-'--''--'-' twenty parking tkke11 before trpl, kid! k pe1.1. S230. ~. 4 A 5 bd1·1ns. !'ome will and drcaU\.) hOost \\Ith l bd· hi, dbl ,car a-a,r._ Cor. lot. he fOlfnd out he wos In 0 GARDENING Roule, Equip.. ALA Rentalt e SU.3900 1 LGE BR, 1 sm BR. ttpl,
-1.J. F1i Vt!'v. ltrm~. n-IA resale ;> •.-ti $23 -I G I 0 ff I D I · • I ment, lnOwert, e d •er 11, lit pt,Uo, CJltd. I blk -·-, ,..... rnu .. 2 bathA. 1, Blk. to th~ 9G2-m!-li ' .;,w. --movi•. .1· \ln cuum & jobs lnc. $1000. RANCl-r S!zt yrd, Stv/rtfr. nr 1tol"f1. S195. 497-tsi_,, fmncJi~7• at~'f~. hr11ch Try 10'7'-down. AMI· I . j _ I'-I' 1 1 A COfl!Jlltl• tf!. chuckle (l'UOl'.d S92-2i3:> Cpt/drps. Kids &, pet1 SIU. I ;-;:;:::o.:;:-'---'='---1 ~ ...... .,,. ~1'1¢ J,j.t,~, :iO X 111 R..J LOT. a Rt. ..._ _ ~by '1lllng 11'1 tNo ~ ,........ ALA Rentals e 6-lS-3900 LW. Isle
SM.1 Adams A\'C.' ~., O L R I E t hoo,o;f'. O~n SAtl~un. t-4 "°" d1v1lop fr°"' •'ltP No. 3 b.low. BEAUTY Shop tor ,o;11lr, 2 -
BUSTEST mltleetplact t
tcwn. Tht DAILY Pn.D
C4Wlted ••rt\on. S a ,. •
monto.v, time • eflot1 b,
anndlalr
• ancy ea S l te 412 igth ~trttt G-l2-4tilO PIJNT NUl-J.BERED l[fJE RS 1 4 flrir-r11tors. R t 11 son ah l t S150 -UTIL PD, 1 BR cottage 3 BR, (fJl!'d, bl rln1, ptlS. J.ti~ l Co11~1 lt1\.I . Cd)! IN THESE.! AR~S S.l&-.'1621 or 962-7,"'66 nn 11 ll Cl'f', Jo/lg h11ir 01\. " frpl, 1Aa5f. Adil•. $300. 1)1~·7170 ro Rf.SUL TS )'Ou c.n ~ G • l'OFFEE Vtndin• R!l11re for Blue Beacon * 645..0111 6T3-1t:)U or (2131 62S-.230!.
-------UNSCIAM!U lUTEIS I I I I I I I ACA!\CIES Cost mol'lty: pend on, CA.U the Su~r-rot AN$Wft S11 lr. Sacrifice! P r I v ale $\lj NICE 2 BR. bltnA, esr., Meta Vtrcfe
Rt<llt ~our hot1!ll'. Ap! . ~!01-e ~a J e • n1 An. 011.!ly Plto! · · - - ' . . P11r!y, 002-3568 fl"l td yard. Chlld/Ptt OK.
bid< .. "' "'"' • O.lly PU01 a,.,,,led '42-61171 • •''"I SCRAM-LETS ANS. WERS IN CLASSIFICATION 800 THE SUN NEVER SET'S on Blue Bucon * 645·0111 s,~n,";,i; '~"~;;..:,,", .. ,•. C\ai;slfi@d 11d. ~·oor ad I-ch&T'ie It! Piiot Cla,~it!td ..,.,.., "1 I ---f"ir l)l'~f rr.~u]!,~ &12-.~7R nlo -t99 .190J, ~!JG.~CJ!'l.
I . I
• ,I
' .
Mondoy, Mmll 8, 1971. DAIL V ~LOT 19
---~ ---
HouM1 Unfurn. 305 Apt1. Fu rn.
IN ·-,---,..-rt-8-.. -c-h---· I S.lbol P•nln1ula
UO Apts. l'urn. UO Apt. Unlurn. l -'~~~-~~-1
Newport ... ch c .. ta M11a
365 Apt, Unlvm.
Co1ta ·Mua
US Apt. Unfurn.
Feuntaln V•lley
365 Apt. Unfvm,
NeWPOrl &..ch
Aph.,
l'um. or urm.m.
A19h.,
310 fum .... u"""". uo
(:HARJ.\UNG 1 Bd fireplace, OCEAN View. Upstn 1 BR.
BEAUT. mod. townho!J1e. 3 Xlnt pen In 1 u J a \oc, Btwn Newport It. Balboa.
Br., <!11 ba, lrplc... patio. Employed adult.s .. no peti. 1 adult, Rtnt rea!Onable to
Pool, 2 Car I"'· All bltn&. Ava il r.tar 1 t1l Jllllt' u. permanent rT•porlllb.le pu-carp, drapes. LA $28S n\O 637_21~ ty Call 67,.m
Huntintton Beach Huntington "'"'
ORLEANS APTS. NEW NEW
1 BR, 2 BA. C<>ndo. 2 car MARINER SQUARE NEW rmr•. l'llol. sm1mo. C4ll 536-7123 after 5,30 pm. APARTMENTS
ADULTS ONLY Announces the av&llah1llty ot
I k 3 BR. Avail Priv•t. ... VILLA CORDOVA Gorden Grove 2 & 3 BR unit. for adulJ&
IJO. pool. tndiv. llundt)I tac. dts.irinJ to llvt amidst beau. Ca.sual esta.te living. Enttr La Quinta R•
iNr. Oranae Co. Airport: Tul-QUlE'J' .....,. EASTGATE: ARtA Cltan. ty by the &ea In the Prt&o , I h t , " rttoll U...
<11 m..4110 or 346-SOOl -..-.,,.o-~=~=====--~·~="~==·~:::-,--eves/wknd&. e S2li WK-Oc!:ANrftONT * $25 WEEK ' UP *
3 BR II Lovely Bachelors, 1 -BR. M!:SA MOT~L tin at 17th St; nr. WtstciWI. .."-Unlt-SAA~u ~,, ipa.ciou11 2 BR l~i BA studio U1~us W1stclltt area ol moea s us green a mospuere a I -• •ti'-Patio. crpta, drps. elec lined walk ways to your apt
174.1 Tustin O>st& .r.feu. I AfMirtm'"t CompleK kltch, laundry facilities. Newport Bea.ch. ALL UTILITllS INClLUDID
. nr a levels schools, Ma.id urvice. Pool. Util. hitclien, TV's, maid urvlce.
r;ardener Included, S300 nxi. • 67&-8740 e Healed pool . ~&-9631 l,.or appt 673-1234 or
....,..81
FRESH Decor 2 Br, 2 Ba,
frpl, &leps to waler. S225.
AL.A Rt':nt&il e s.L).39))
1 ER. \?early. Sl60. Incl util .
319 Fernando St. C 1 11
673-5805
l BR. furn. &pis. Util incl'd.
No chddren or ~ts. 24-0~~i
16th St., N.B. 64M664
Mrr. Mrs. TbOm-•"2·4&11 I & 2 BEDROOMS Walk to •boppi"&· Nr hwy, FROM $230 I BR. Unf. $150 -Purn. $190 ~ I Entertaini111 wUl be • pie••· $Ui0 mo. l2!m Balley. r/Jr information phont Mr. 2 IR. Unf. $110 -Furn. $210
ON SAY. near Lido, 1 BR.
apl. Boat 5.lip ava i l .
SlWrnonth. 673-M50
----------D U "" lo I 897-5042 Rob!rt M. Buckley. t.tanq. I d f I h' U ure. ecora na t..... ve Y, er. at (TI.i) 645.~ or write 3 Spac. flr. pans. tcor. urn. s mgs: va
VACATJON Yf rnd. 1 Br.
Slv/M!fr, kid& .t: ptlJ. SUO.
ALA Rentals e MS.3900
.. PARK LIDO 3 Br. 2n
Ba, Crp11, rlrps, blr-inl.
f'ittpla~. S275. 6"2-8197.
BACHELOR apt&, util paid,
S!IO & up a mn. 3W E.
Balboa Blvd. HARBOR
TOWNHOUSE
spacious apt will be & joy. Huntington Beach to The Office of the Man-within romantic &etting w/fun or privacy.
• Special cabinet 11paca Terraced pool, prl sunken (U BBQ'a w/
========= IWATERTRNT, 2 BR, l ba,
Cos ta Met e furn w/uUJ, Yf'11rly. $275.
3601 Finley, 13.l-1134
• Lock 1araa:e1 w/ ta: ator a;er, hfariner Square Apt1, ulded """ L "'·-..ada L Fo"-! a Bm et!il e Lndry e Patioa l BR, Cl'P!'· drps~ refr~.. 12-14 Irvine Ave, NB, Cal ~'fn. sea,_.,. comp W1 naiu • .._...
RE!'t1ARKA!ILY 1 BR. Oceanfronl. tiiJiilie 221.T Harbor, ntar Wi!Jon
:I BR. 116 BA S'It.IOIO
TOWNHOUSE. $140/mo,
e D\V/dl!pl •Hua: au tve bltns, Sll.i mo. _incl uti1. 92664. I . e 1 Also 1 BR Studio, 2 ba, """!i"!lil!l"'!"'!'!"'"""'""'""'"I* Color co.ord. \:It w7 l"direct li9hfll'l9.
• Special soundproollni refr11 .• bltn1, near octan. PARK NE\VPORT-care tru * Oeluxe ren9e & ovens * Plush 1h19 crpf9.
I• Dr:ep 2 cnlor shq: Sl"5. Tradewin<U: Realty live overlkg . the ~·a ter. 1 * Bonus store"e &pau ~ Cov. c1rporl c&fl>tt1, drapes M7...a511. I 7 ~ ~ • GAS & WATER PAID poo s, tennis cts S•.iu.\llAI * Sculptured mlr~le pu lmen l t ilt b1th1
Mo. to Mo. From $140. Children Welcome Ba.ch. 1 or 2 Br. Also_ 2 * Elegent recre1tion room.
UNRELIEV.ULY EXTRAORDINARILY ISth. su;,imo. Util pd.
BEAUTIFUL Adlts, no pets. 673-M88 S•nta Ana Heights
• Heated pool-Adull,s only HALF acre hor5e ranch or
licen~ doc ktonnf'I. Clt!:an
3 BR housr. 3 chUdtt.n OK.
S275. Avail 4/1. OwMr,
54.}-2536
V I D,. G ~-A I MOBILE hOme 1 BR t'ly 1 •Hr• a,._n P 1 turn'd lncl linen& Ir. Adulta, oo pets
• No pets-AdJ to shoppina 2l23 Eldt!:n Ave c~t lmmi.c . .t !:r. 3 Bi.. Studio '~ Townhouses . Elt!:C. kit., flURNISHED MODELS O'IN DAILY , 4-1 Pri . pn. pat or bal &ubrrn parlq,: ••• Di (Near Back Bay) apl. P ex. v. paliO. opt maid ser, cpts, drp&. Blk from HunWligton Center, San 91<>
See Mir. Ted Wood.bead Crpti, d~. bltna. Lrt play Jui;t N. of Fashion Isl at Frwy .• Goldenwest Collet e. Putting &'l'ttn, wa tufall &: dishwart, sm mo 646-4065. ------
1tream, Oowers everywhere, 2 BJt uppl!T .. W~ to beach.
•.. ~1 billi"--' S250 tncl util. Yearly. Avail " """ . rec. room. ...u•. P•rk-Like Surroundings
QUIET • DELUXE 64&.0032 area. Cul--de-aac it. No pets, Jamboret! & San Jnaquln San. Diego Frwy. to Beach Blvd., So. Oil ,
11171 Bell Circle. 8t2-S677. Hills rd. 644-1900 for JeasinJ Beach 3 blU. to Holti W. on Holt to ••• ·===-Si\t 2 BR. Ac (or 2 horses
20271 Acacia St . S15'1
li7l-22j9, eves 673-J72J
BBQ's. Sauna, fum .• Ul'lfurn., l-'3/-'l'-. _21.c;l.;.l_<~•~'·~"~"..,·--
Single1, 1 BR. 1 BR + ckn, Newport Heights
1·2 & 3 BR APrS
Also FURN. BAClIELOR.
Prv patios * Htd Pools
Nr &1-.op'g * Adults only
* FRESH AIR . '""· LaQulnta Hermosa 714: 847-5441
University P•rk
2 BR. From $135. See it! 1,,,..,,-,,,....,...--0--::-'"""'°"'" 2000 Parsons Rd., 642-8670 CLEAN 1 or l Br. A:dlta,
Belween Harbor & Ne~, no pets. LI kit. S135-$150.
HACIENDA HARBOR
MARTINIQUE APTS
Walk 3 blk5 to Beach! WESTCLIFF area-2 hr. 2
Beaut. big 3 BR apt. w/w ba, C/D, frplc, palio.I A!•pah--------~Ap"""t'"s-------·I
d bl Adulfs. Sl70-Jl80. 16 0 1 '' ., -crp!Ji. rps, tn& ex~pt Bedio·'. Al" n•w &a rden Furn. or Unfurn. 370 furn. or UnfUrn. •1v --2 Blk N l'tl> 24" E. 161h St. NB. 646-1!!01 4 BR. &: family rm ••.. S33.5 1..::..::c..'-c..· :c.c:c.·~----1 .-.,..-,-,.---.,----=
J BR., fam. rm. & din. rm. * Sl.30 UP * Apt. Unturn. 365
Qultt Adult Living ?"!frig. $225. No pea. 536-1711 ru ""
1777 Santa Ana Ave, or 2 br. 2 ha, CJD, frpl c, Ballaoa lll4IJ\d Huntington leach
Mil'. Apt ll3 646-~f2 ALL UTIL. PAID *, $1~ *; dishwshr. Adulta. 1665 Turtle Rock ......... , S3li GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOM! I
3 BR., & din. rm. , , • , •• $325 GorgeC1us, park-like setting. 1 ·G;;;;;;en,.e;::r:;;•==;;;;;;;;;=;;;;;;; 1 & 2 SR'!. $l50-$l70. Sher ASK About our discount plan. Irvine across irom Coo:i's.t~--------· I ;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;==•I * Sl30 UP * carpets, bit.Ins. encl aar. 2 BR, crPts, drps, blw, car. S195. &12-0239. 2 Sty. 2 ~r. den , 2 Ba.
4 BR., 2\.ii bath1 ........ $325 Clo.sed garages ! or max-11 GIANT 1 & 2 BEDROOM! ai;e1. Swimmln.: Pool. New. port. $2'lit~ve-In Allowance. A New Way To Live :rvallu~~meJ~rb' :,e. ::: ON BEACH! Gorgoous, park-like setting. 1y decor. Beaut. land1cpd. 7$ U ca 536-2'16l In Newport Beach 673-3245
Closed ~araaes for max-Adults, no peti. 2 BR. l Ba, Di&hwsr, ~fl'ii. OAKWOOD GARDEN !.£--'-~~-----* 1 Bdnn •••••••••••• SJlS
imum security. Quiet street. 241 Avocado e 64#r0979 Cpts-Drps. Natural beam APARTMENTS Co1ta M11• * 2. Bdrm •••••••• frOm $23:1
!mum"""'"'" Qui""""'· YEN DOME Adults, no pel!i. 2 0 2 O
f'ullerton Ave <Harbor to IMhlACULATE APTS! "I l11l1 ·1 11·llil.
Adults, no pet5. 2 0 ~ 0 ~ ~Uit\i. pa~ & . pool, nr On 16th Street brwn * 3 Bc!rm •••••••··••••• '11' f'uUerton Ave (Harbor to hoipital Quiet, View. 17676
1
Irvine and Dover Dr. SAY MEADOW APTS. Furniture Avail&ble
Bay. then So. un1i1 2 bl ks ADULT and
So. of Newpart Blvd. 642-8690 FA~fILY SPcllon ·---''I lv1di11r
!'SINCE 1946"
* GARDENS. 1 & 2 BR'a, Clo1ato shopping, Park
Furn or unlurn. Bltns, c.rpt5, * Spacioua 3 BR'1, 2 ba ,
drapes, p o o J. NASSAU * Swim pool, pu1 /1reen
PAL.\1S, 177 E. 22nd St., I * FrpJ, Tndivllndry fac"l1
CJ\.1. 642-3645 or 67H044. 1145 Anaheim Ave.
B•y, "''" So. until 2 blla fROM $135 C..m•rn,, &12-61'2__ (714) 642 "170 C.U,..~·drapea-dilhwaabor
So. of Newport BJ.vd.) G H . B u BEACHBLUFF Apts FOURPLE" 3 ~BR ' BA Bea~ celling•. ~~n·ur~v. htated pool.aaunu-Wlnil
1st Weslern Bank Sida
University Park
Days 83J..Ol01 Nights
M:i-8690 u eanng • u t-1ns NEW 2 BR 2 BA di h ash ,.\, . , pat1011, ~rea on ac tlt s. rec room«ean views
LRG dlx apt&, Sl40 2 Br, Air.Conti • Water Included 1 ' . ttJi •El~! · 0 \.V, trp.lc. imm&d occupy. All Adults, no pet!. patios-ample Parldn.a
COSTA MESA 642-282-1
S160 3 Br, 2 Ba. Htd Pool. 1 & 2 Bedrooms ers, ~.r;uo. 347 39•7 s. $225. Adults. lnq. .tat A * 2 BR. from $1M * Security IU&J'dl,
Newey dee. Play yd. Cptd.I Carpet; and Drape1 or · " Patrice Rd. 154.2-4387 HUNTINGTON
Drps. IDlNi. Patio. Child. Endo~ J;araa:t":~. WALK TO IEACHI I 642-1711. 387 \V. Say St. (btwn Harbor
ok. 'Pool /.: Re;creatlon Room, LOVELY NE\V l &: 1 BR's. Newport Heights & Newpon Blvd, % mi N. PACIFIC
19'38 Maple Ave. 642-63-l-t 160 W•tt Wilson Crpts, drps, dsh\\'ashers. ot 19th SI). TU OCEAN Avt., H.B.
Newport Beach RENTAL FINDERS 2214 C.Ollege Ave. 646--0627 642·7373 709 Palm e 'S47-39J7 NICE 2 Br. Pool. Sundeck. CALL 6"6-0073 <n-4) 5.18-l4S1
I"""''"""""'""'"""'""'"'"" "~ _ _::::::.,::.:._ ___ l;-;;0 0,;.-;;;:::;-:;;;:'.;-;:;:;-I Bllns, cpt/drp, adll1. no Of -6 n .. 11 ..
•ADULTS PREFERRED • * DELUXE 1 BR & Frff To L1ndlord1 *BRAND NEW* AVAIL ~f h 1:5 l BR 2 BR. 2 BA. New shag crpt. t SIOO MZ-8001 642-800fi EXCITING furn 1 BR apt wi'wo~.101 WamALT~p ~CO .• Bachelor apts. S3S wkly & -•re · fncd patio, aar. 1 blk to pe 5· · • S135. Pvt deck. pool, Crpta. ftJl LS\o3
:l Br. 2 Ba . Gar .. , ...... $225 up. Furn. incl util. Monthly 645.0111 LA COSTA API'S, l & 2 BR. du~lex, &love, crpts, 2 5 Pl5 St.ores Hunt. Beach. S•n Clemente drpa; bltna Walk to town.
l Br. 2\1 bath.~ "• ....... S250 W '" C M ch1ld ren. no pet•. RP"f's 116-O '673-3293 .........._ 14· E tsth CM .,. M•9 LIV!: AT THE BEACH' terms avail. 998 El Camino.!~~·~";,:;~·':.___~·.:."".;,'•......,---Bltns, swimming pool & a:ar-.....,,., 1145 .c:A' v lc1or1· ;) wner. · DEL'~ 2 BR 2 ... R J · • · · ....... ;r.N • 3 Br. 2 ba., ne""· cpts, drps 54" .. ,-, .~.. . . VI a, ' Vo"\L " °"" eves b™rn 5 &: 6 New 1 aft. Sha& _, drpt
S I. 1 1 127-~ f S 1 Ad 1 lit, All util pd, Sl50 to Sl70 546-1076 • \VALK to ~arh, deluxe ' bltlns, dshwhr, rec. room.'-""'~~'--':--'-~~= _,, · P ll ev' ········-··· "~~~~~~~~-Just er inge ut1 · 1· LOVE 1-CASA PLAYA Aptl, 14th REALTOR 54&-SOOG $25 Per Week & Up rno. Adults, no pets. . I & 2 BR. $\JJ -+. No Adulli; only. S180. 492-2259. 1t LY , "• 1 &: 2 BR. . BACHELOR le 1 BR. SOUTH BAY CLUB 354 Avocado, CM. 642-!1708 2 Br 1~d10-Pvt patio, encl summer increases. Royal panel'a, patio, Yl'd •• aa~/Wlr ~·~w_._1,_u~t.~53&-836,._'-',-1 ___ 1 Townhou11 Unfurn. 335 TV & maid aerv avail. APARTMENTS i;:ar, tn: ba, crpts I drps/ Hawa iian, 220 12th St, H.B. Santa AJ\a pd. Infant ok. 12'191 Edi~er Newport Beach
450 Victoria. C'.J\.f, Newport Beach WILSON GARDEN APTS. hl!nll. No. CJ\.1. SlGJ. Adults. $150 • VERY spacious 2 Br. (n r Harbor). Huntington Beach 83o 1Nine Ave. 2 BR Unfurn. Nt!:wly dee. 5-19·0433. s!udlo apt. Small children VILLA MARSEILLES 12511 sq ft 11 2 S r, l'ii ba.
J BRDr.t, 11 1 BA, fully 1 BR. $125 • 2 BR. $140 I Irvine al'd 16th) 1"c111 cpts/drps. SP a c * LRG 1 BR. 11.pt. All new ok. 11674 Van Buren Lane, BRAND NEW ull rm for wh/dr patio
carpeted'. Pool. Bltn1, crpts, drpli, no (714) MS.OSSO grounds. Adlts, no pet~. crr.t.s, drps, tile k paint. HB. SPACIOUS a:ar, cpt/dp. $1'5 s.i&--8681.' i----"~'-'-"'-'--"l=lO ~~~d~~·c~. ~~-n:.--r E. 2 BR up, 111 BA, It htrl ~~:oy ~. "}~&r2'l83bor, ~~;t~~~ 998BlmEsi ,.~~~~moc",,15'46-00l. CHEZ ORO APTS l & 2 Bdrm. Apts. Huntington Be~ch
Duplex es Unfurn. pool, ulil furn, 1 lnfanl , ,... .......,,. ..... · · &234 Atlanta, 1·2 BR, l)l'lOI, Adult Living
$155 ·SHARP 2 BR. no ~ts S14:i. 642-214!1 on Wilson). STUDIO 2 Br. Nt!:w cpt1. private ga.raa:e. Wa5htt1, Furn. & Unfurn. 3 Br. SlSO/up, Patio. Pool .
General
2 BR DUPLEX garagto.
Crp!s, drps. stove, watPr,
tardenP"r. Adul~. no !W"l5.
$16.i. 2035 Tustin Ave. Costa
Heated Pool. Adults, no pets Balboa Peninsula * FREE drps, Pal.Jo. Closed gar. 1~ dryers. 536-&338; 530-2727 I Dishwasher c.olo coordinat. Children ok . lnq. rental
(teen ok). 642-9520 RENTAL SERVICE Ba. Nr __ ahop~i;:._ Adults. no 2 BR apt, 3 blks from ocean. ed appllan~es . rplu&h shaa: bonus now. l\fOftA KAI * Sl5 per wttk up 2 BR . frplr. balcony, ?15 COila ltiesa • Hunti"""on FW"1~. Sl.>:>. 66-3.SlS. $16:> mo. Avail hlar. 20th. carpej choice of 2 color Apts, 1!881 ?>fora Kai Ln.
lklt h
"'
125 -· ·-k E. Bay. Winter rAte5 Sl~ ,,., * TOWNHOUSE * S36 !'ID -I -.., blk E. of Beach, oU \\' c e · -r-• .. """ Buch e Newport Beach · 1 • schemes • 2 baths -alall Garf' Id 962-8:194
up Apls. ltJOTEL. 543-9'15S. mo, Yrly S22S mo . ln'fuire 1-2-3 BR APTS. 2 B~. 1% BA, crpts, drp5, 2 BR apl • w/w, drp1>, bltns, i;howers • mltrot!d ward-It · . ., '
AVAJL now I & 2 Bt. furn. No. C. 67l -lj2\ of ;;.ts.mi Ask aboul our DISCOUNT pauo. Adults. Sl60. 134 E. dispasal. la undry apace. No robe dorlra • lndirect IJ1ht. HOUSE Huntina . Watch the
VISTA DEL MESA
Ap•rtment•
1 & 2 BR. Furn & Unr. Dilb·
wa1he r • Stove and 1tetrit .
Shq crpt'a:. Lra: Rec c:f.nttt.
Occupancy in Mardi
RENT Stuta $155
Tustin & Mesa Drive * 545-4Jl5 *
BACHELOR. It 1 br &~
Nr Bay, Eves. 575--tatl or ,,._,,,,, Pool, rec rm, id location. Coron. dal Mar PLAN. Call 636-022tl. l\lelody Ln. 5-18-1768 pets. 962-&57& lor info ing Jn kitchen . breakJa11 OPEN HOUSE column.
No pets or ch 11 d re n. e NEWL y NEAT, clean crpted 1 br $.'ll movina aJiow. New 2 1 bar • hU£!!: priv11ite fenced -------
NE\V J Br. 2 Ba. Cp!Ji., 646-j824, DECORATED ""'/gar. SUD. Back ~ Br from Sll5. CpU/drps, patio. plush landscaptnr . * * * * * * :\.titi:cch 16, ~JOO ;\lo. 1 Exaiptionally nice I _. Crpts, d .... ll. Adults only, no 1-~ area. 846-7277. ed pools & lanai. Lr-----------------~I drpll, gar. Avail. on lease, FURN Bachelor & 1 Br. ~-V QUIET 2 BA.'s. Gar & Pool. area. Z8CI Del r.tar. GE bltns, lncd patios, play brick Bar·B·Q'•. larJ:e heat.
Corhin-:\tarttn Rltrs 644-7662 2110 Newport Bl .. ,,, CM .. '' 3101 So Bristol St vu pets. * 642-BGU LGE modern 2' SR. 2 ha, Lagun1 Baich · •
Costa Mesa "1n , \VK _ 1 -r. w/ kit New crpt, nr achoot11• Bltni. ("Ii Ml. N. of So. Coast PJua)
-•· ON Tl!:N ACRES * $170 * S t A DELUXE duplt>x, J BR. 2
ba. cpl ~. drpa. r r p I c,
Garag~. No pet1. 54.l-8395
S35. Maid ser, linens, TV 1 & 2 BR. Furn. & Unturn. 3 Br, 11i Ra, patiO bit-ins, storAge, S165. 64.'>-1496. OCEAN VIEW. Lrg Bachelor PHO~E:' 55;.8200
& lrlt-. StaJark M&tel, Flrepl!.ces I priv. patios. Crpts, drpa. Ask about our 2 BR, 11,; ba, Cpt.!., drps, & 1 8 R aptJ. Cpl!, drp11, !
2301 Npt Blvrl. M6-T445 Pools Tennis C.Ontnt'J Bktst. discount pla.n, Mo Center pa tio, No pets, $175 mO incl blt-in8, patio. Walk'i dist. LGF.: niC'rly furn t BR. apt. 900 Sea Lane, Cdl\I 644-2611 St. 642.834{1 util. 54&-8803. to town. 100 Cliff Dr,
SIJ5. Closed garai-e. No (?.facArthur nr Coast Hwy) I * GARDENS, 1 & 2 BA.'1. $100. 1 Bdr. Dix. Bit-ins. <.aguna Beach. 4M-5498.
Trader's Paradise
EWL&
Huntington Beach CAN'T BE BEAT
2 BR l BA, crpts, drps, I J"'IS. TM> men. lnquirt' 192{1 Cpts/Drp~, Prl. bale. Gar. Mesa Verde
11tnve, i'arage. FQ;c. dee. "R" \V11.l111ct-or 838-0038 Furn or unfurn. SltnA, erpts, like nu, xlnt Joe. 962--4180. SINGLE STORY
AvllU 4/1 Sl65. 962-7137 *COROLIDOAPTS * drp11. p ool. NASSAU --------.,....-South Sea Atrnospht'r• l ·D-~l-------1 • l ~ Hed'1td 126PD0!-1 N1o 2 Br. 1tudios k street Jevel1, PAL:'v1S 177 E. 22nd St., LRG 2 Br Studio, 1'7 h11., 2 BR. New crpl, drps, clo&td 2 BR, • 2 "BATH
up ex es, ix:11. ""'"Is, rps. "on e 1 Sl85 & up. Penthouses $22(). Cl\t &1i.3&ti or 675-6044. dre~nz rm, f'lll.lio, pool. $150 gar, nr.ar shop'&. Adults, Carpets & drpa
Furn. or Unfurn. 355 I V11ta Ave. 642--5790. Dsftwhr. trpl dbl carport. HA.RBOR GREENS & S160. 2925 ?itendoia no pets. $1~5. 645--3515 Alr Conditioned
N B h QUIET, studioi S115, 1 BR's, P6ol. 673-33711° 2 BDR.i\f 1haa; crpt, drps, Newport Beech Private P&tios
ewport eic S1 25. No chldm or pet.a. GARDEN &: STUDIO AP1'S fireplace, ""tlo. 13t3 Baker• ---------·I HEATED POOL FOR lease. debc. all elt-r.. ,.~ 1 ~ OCEANFRONT 3 Br. 2 511, 2135 Elden Ave. Cl\f, IH Jae, new w/li view 2 BR. BactL 1, 2, 3 BR's. from SUD. St. ca.JI 531-2399 VIE\V, 2 Br, l Ba . trpl, Plenty of lawn HAVE:: 7l' 1ravel tt'lller,
furn. $300 :\lonlh. A\'ail. mgr Apt 6· l BA apt. All bit-in& ind 2700 Pe.tenon Way, C.M. NE\\'LY redecoraied studio, eltt: kit., enc i:ar, walk tn Carpan & St.oraa~ aelf cont.
April 1111. Pet~ OK . Sl4C 1 BR. Sl75 · 2 BR. d!shwshr, dbl. car. Adlts 546-037D 2 BR, 1~11 ba, nr iboppina OC!':an & h11y. Adlts, nn pets. HIDD!:N VILLAGE TJltADE for : 26' sailboat.
BAYFR.ONT 2 Br. 2 Ba. Ulil pd. Pool. Gardtn Liv. only. 67H992. 2 &r. Untum Apt. Stov1t & & 1ch0ols, Sl~. M6--1TJJ i7~i!100$265. !75-53 97 . GAJltbEN APTS. Call
unr. $26.l t1n leaR. 1 ing. Ad.It!, no peu, 740 W. 2 BR d Ad 11 refrlg incl'd. Gara&e . Pool. 1 Dan• Point · 2500 South Salta + 649-2206 *
r · R I! 51· 6060 I 8 s 0.1 ·• carp., "'pes. u s I PtGE 2 B 2 B Santa Ana 41 546-1525•.,.,====-=-.,..,,,_~ l"\\'ln, ea or .... 1th I., '. only, no pt!& S11:J All util pd. Adl!Ji only, no .. LA r, a, 1At.!PHr8IOUS CAR., A·l
LGE. 2 BR. 111 M, frPL j ATTRACTIVE E-side Studi~ Don f'r11nklin Rltr. 673-2m ~ts. Mrr. No. 9, la3 W. SPl:CTACU'.AR ntr 1 cpts/drpa, bltns. encl a:ar. "'!!'""!!!!!!!!!!!l!!!!!!O ... l!!!!fmnd, hfuit stt to Mli~vf'. Furn. or uni. S225-l'lj mo. epL 2 BR. 11,; JU, Pool. Wilson St. . bocea n patio. Sl75. ~S-370!. =
REALTOR "'2-lDOO No pel• '4""'IO LGE 1 br, ne1v pa1n16.7_c~~l~ ..._ BEAUTIFUL I '· l BR I v1tw, 2 BR, 2 1. 11°.,':;!· OPE" l '2! Hil•n'o W•y NB Apts., \Yorth $1800. TRADE FOR
'" ~-.,....,., · & drspes. $16:l/mo. "'""°°" • "" · utrta. cpl.I & drpa. S£..... " ~ · Furn. or Unfurn. 370 lllte model bit car or elder
NICELY Furnished l It 2 art 5:30 nr wknds. C.Ontemporary Glt.tden Apts. 837-5370 2 BR, _2 Ba Sl!" Lsr.. M. ;:;:::;::;-------l :'~'''0''0:'"'~"~·_:54~8-3M9~':'.._~~., Br Trtlilers. SllD It up. C M Patios, frplc a , pool. Eosf Bluff l\tack !X>T-3700, 213: ~l-7039 Gener•I
13:i \V. WU son. 5U-9j7T. ts ta e1a S14~160. Call 546-5163. WESTCLIFF 2 Br. lldlls, no ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;; IHome & Bualntlll combil'll'ld
S67.50 BACHELOR APt. l.1an I "THE GABLES" pets, cpts/drpi;, bltns. 1728 • Cl ror-2 bll'lilii, Co~IJI Mf'si'I ,
only. 1J2 w. \Vilson. Call 2 n~. 11.~ BA w/ car. S150. N!WPO~T BEACH Bedkirrl Ln. Sl1;i.,54S-7533 PALM MESA APTS. ~~.6:r~ttu~~J:~.~in~~
Apta. Furn. 360 54S-9j77. Arllts, Cpb, drps, 1ncd yd. Villa Gran.eta APt1. DUPLEX 2 doon f~m Bch. acrei. OWNER 64&8558.
I'"'--------$ll~ mo. 1 BR, All util paid, 2437-0 Crance Ave. 636-4120 Four bedr06m1 with balcon. 4 Br 2 ha uppt:r, fllr .. crpt, 1 BR unfum , ....... $135.001-.-,-,,,.,,,---0 .,,,.....~
Genaral Pvt patio. Newly furn, * SEAUTIFUL 1 & 2 ~R-le' above & "elow. Gr1c~u1 drp&. Yrly $300. 642--9242. 1 BR turn ••••.•...•• Ste.so \Vant HJ D•urt Calif -out·
I Ap•rtm<ma IOI'••:'.] rt]
lines
times
dollars
Tl\.l,DE, NEW l'OltTAaU: : scua .• COMPJtUIOl\, 1
tor LARGE OUTBOARD •
h10TOR. ~. 7995 I U2-Ul1 !
llft•r 5 PM. I
lG-2 BR wtitt CM Sl25 M. !
Loan $5.5.000 aaumable &I ,
e.6%. Trade fo r clear heine
thl• area S25430M I: own!r ·
carry 2nd. Aat 549.0211.
* + • * * 4S AlTI'O?i-fAnC PISTOL, 20 '
roui\ds fired. Value ;IS. 1
rrad11 for comparable wtap.
on. Sf6.tl15t.
* * * *
Adults, Qui~t. 54!!-0959. Contemporary Garden Apts. livinr & quiet svrrenndtna Bachelers Furnl1he.1 ol-state. heal!h. Have Cl
2217 Harbor. near WllJon Patio•. frplcs, pool, $145 • for famil:; \lllth thlldrfon. TIME FOR from SllS corner 90xll7 2 bld&1. Eq • UTL Pd, gar, pri yd, l Br,
cpt/drp, cpl or bach. No
~ts. Sl2:5. MS-1405, 646-6762
a 2 BR. 1 BA TOWNHOUSE. Sl60. Call 546-516.1 Near Corona del Mar HIJh 2 BR. aplJ $175 mo. S42Af. F.P. $68M inc. S44S
S'l'ttL tra~ utfll~ trtil-.
er. u~ oftly 4 ~t1: Will '.
trade: for shell, for ,. X 51,i' ,
pi Ckup bed.
All on 1 floor. ;12S.S135 A'ITRAC like new 1.2 BR. Scheel. Fin!place. wet bar & 'i)UICK CASH mo.Imo. OK mo. Owner C.M. 646-&SS8.
• Heated pooAd!·Adulhts o~ly Lg pool, cpl!, drps, diapl, built-in kitchen appUances. THROUGH A • POOL Two 2-Bedrm 2 BA 1\.1rfr.-;t
EI Puerto M111 Apt1 • * * .. I DUPLEX 1 BR. furn or
unfum. nea.r 1Mp'1. Qulet.
1 Bedroom Apt1. • No pets. J to s oppinz ull J'ld. 1884 Monrovia. 135 AMIGOS: WAY 6H-2991 •SAUN A condos w/5hp's, approx +uif
• No <hil""'" 543--0336. Coldw•ll. Bankn & C<>. DAILY PILOT • JACUZZI eo .. for !l ""'"·
1'fanafin& Aient Ml~ WANT AD 1561 hie11;1 Dr. Sanft Ana Call SlJO & up Incl. utilit1!:1. Also No dop or cAU;. 543-2720.
turn. Pool "· R.ecreatittn Dan• Point I MARCH NEW3 Brownenunit,frplc,
ar@a. Quiet En\'trnnment. all bltm, 1baa: crpt$, drp&,
ou ilrl!ei parkina. No Chil· I SINGLE, TV, poel, pets ok. I Move-In Bonus closed a:arate. Immed. Oc-
e NEW DELUXE e 642·5678 12131 5'~"3i3 •vea!Wktnda
3 BR. 2 BA Apt for lease. Incl1~~-------\ie'll help )'(lu tell! &12-<5157! Hive 21ii aere Vo'OOdtd er.,
spec. master suite. din rm Apts., Apt1., a:on land. value s.2500. Want
& dbl 1ari.;e. auto door Furn. or U"furn. ?JO Furn. or Unfu1n. 370 Pi~Jrup or auto of equal
opener avail. Pool il ~c.1 ..,..--,....----'"'-~--,....--..;;..---vaJIHI. • • ..
area. General General • liTl-61tt9 *
drtn, no pt'!ls. I S25 . & up. wkly. Dana 1 mo's Fr•• Rent cupancy. 54~2321.
• ;\farina J.nq. 3W1 ~I NEW spacious 1 ... 2 &.
l95S-l96I r.laple Avo!:, H1vy.-· $SO'tnov•ln allowance "Bltns. crpt5, drps. Rar. Im--
Costa ?.itsa EXCEPTIONAL J-2-l BR.. 2 BR. FRO.\f Sm. CO~f· rned . occupancy. :>45-2321.
l k 2 bA. Opf!n, Cordova PLETELY R.EDEC, CLEAN 2 BR. Townhst. 1~~ BA. e $265 e
lfOLIDAY PLAZA 111 Olinda. Owner. Ph. k COZY FAMILY UNITS. Patio, l child ok. No pell. ~ Aml&O& Way, NB
DELUXE Spacious 1 BR .t92--42ri. c6NV. LOCATION. VILI.A SIOO. ~11!12. 10 48-A Mana(ed by
fl1rn apt S.135. Heated pool. Huntl"gton Oiach =-~~t91'5· 119 W. Wilson. Mission \VILLtA~t WALTEPtS c6.
Ample parkina. No children 3 Lr Br'a, .2 Bl, riew cpts, TOWNHOUSE • 6Wneri 4
• no pets. 1965 Pomona, BEAUTIFUL F't]R.N. APTS. FAIRWAY drps, no pets, ChiUJffn ok. Br, 3 a... &llO 2 Br, 2li C~t $1•!0-$1~. Quiet, priv. patio, Avail now. Sl&S/f\'IO. $&5-Tl45. Ba. P•tlni. Encl I a r .
CHAT&AU LAPOINTE 2.w.,urollea. l!'Plo, "''~"'1 ., · 67>Sl!3.1
DELUXE fu'" ' B" l pl. nn. "'ked .$. ,.,, Pool. VILLA APTS. NEW!.• ditoor ' BR. '''" Fou•l•ln vjiley •--Cl ·"· 1160 ( Sauna. Rte nn. dl'.Pt. bltns. 2-ctr i trut. ,. ,.,,.,1. Ost to .,,.,p~. , 17301 Keelson LI\, ft blk W. • Sl60 673-1909
Aliultll. no Pf!!~. I of Beach Blvd, on Slale.r). 2 & l BR 1 ~QUl~ET~~,~B~R-. -""-.,-.-,~.,,-., AU. NEW
VALLEY PAl!K HK1 ~~~Avl':., C.M. * 842_711411_ I Private pallo, pool • tndlv. blt-init Ad.Its, no pets. SW . cusrrii't FURNITURE • . laundry lac. 540--fllOO APARTMENTS
RENTAL Se d I 811) DELUXE Bachelor Units • Near Ora~, Co Aifi>ert A .OJ)'ns new donra fM" • Can ;.~6~a!s \Valk to ~an. Util~ pd. ucr. Adults onl~. 2 BR. unf. W/W cp!J, dr'Jll, • : ."YOUNG FAMILIES
• LINDeGRG CO. SM--251!1 20122 Santi Ana Ave. hit.in ran~ Adults only. 2 BR. Aptl $160
Bilbo• 1,11nd Laguna B••ch l\f.&'r, Mrs. Joachim, Apt l-A I No pels. S48-4US · 2 BR. Garden Apts $175
urrn.E ISLE w/boa.l lndl°'fro1t lease 1 Br, furn. Octul 546·6215 L_RG·QiUl&T·CLEAN 2 BR. Townhousas $1&5
2 Br. 24 tt. Jlv rm, phont!, View Deck M lts only no SEAcun· Manor A p 1 s . $165. 2 BR. 1'~ BA. CE kllch. I
1 t\'. Rd Mal. a~rb dl!PoM-1 ts . $2501~. Util. 4gs."~ Bachelor, 1 & 2 BR, 1\, Adlta. £.1\de. C!ltf. M!.&02 j Pre·teheol center. Adij}t pool.
To hillanct Of kl\\• \\·~ntu pe · BA. $1lT.sG-$1«1. $30 move 2 r&R, 1 BA. Crpts. dtps, O\lldrtn"1 pool, Prlv Pfidos.
I.st 7/1. l160 mo. 15'1l--SM4 . Lid• Isle_ "''"' < . {~ 1Jlowance + r • ~. bltn&, 11111 car. 1 chlld ok.. . Eltc kitchens, Wall te waJJ
'WEED It &: rt•t>" .cltan WCJ?' ApU. l'Un!fsbed l dt8COll:nt. Cl'l'tl.-dqls. pati&, .ts. 11:43/mo. 6*-3-132 cleatta: It carpets. l play.
out thll b'l!:asurea .. 'tra1h -sr.. & Btchtlor. Car•re. l r:r''· F~rtn 54~ 1323 12 8Jt 2 BA •Pt util rm I rround.a. Cuporu • llOf·
tul'T1 ~to Cll~ lh.ru a Daily ~200. $225. S2SO. 320 Nord. acent • vt. · $1.10 mcinlh. c 1 11.' • aae.
Pilet aulUted ad. g.i2..,'J6't3 TI4: 6f2-4007 t BR unfurn' nl.'i/rr.n. u!ll • S4).25tj e
VACANCIES Cost mont)'l THE "'Yellow Paces" uf 11t1irl. Arlull~. no pel~. 8.20 1725& $, E uclid St. ~nl )tour hou.se. a.pt., al~ I cllt.51\lled. ' • Dally p I lo I ~ntPr St., C.'1. liil2-M4S I' ~R . comp! Cl'Jlht ,I: .Crpd. I (Jual sou b ot W41l'ler In
Nda' etc lhru 1 Dally Pilot Sflrvlee: Oirtctery. Check It Dally Pilot \\'8nl Adi have hh-!n~ It. d1hw1hr. ln xlnl Foun11ln VallQ) oa1~·\lled ad. rm tbe aervlce )'OU DIJIHI, be.rgaln1 plol'lf. 1"11'. Ci4~~SC:t, P h ene (714) 541-471!
1"jjiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii I •rave '67 OJ'lfn Road 1 ton 11 ehl11&l11 mount c a m per.
at the beach •••
,
21111 Brookhurwt SL
Hufttln9ton Btach,
(714) H2.ee5S
Aek for
Commander R1ttln1
-._ .. ....
•
Want late %. ton Plck\lp,
car or 11~ * 673.8809 * Ii"'" 15.lOO ""'.Tb + caAh. WANT: 6 to S unl!J.
l'?oefer Coda Meu. Fortin
Ot. lnJ,C W•1tclttf Dr.,
Newpert Beach. 642·~
Sailboat wanted, tlberglau
22' to 2&' • txchan1e fish·
inr boat. 17'. 100 hp Mere •
with 11-'jrt! m()('Jrina:. 133--
Slrtllmline all elum tr&iltt
21' twtn, crp!d_ lmm•c. in
•~It 11k nr Wta &rblnl.
Val S35CQ. Want prep th.ii
Itta Und $10,0tlO. Jox 415,
Goleta, Ca. 9i01T.
Tr•de ';! 0...,. ~ will dr.
Pick tJr. Xlnt ctin4. Util
box bed. FOlt bo3t or
' Call-I
* * w za; F
·-
~: 548-lSM
Have eeeanh'&nt bome 2lm-!
b1ia. IN. of hl&rro Bay), :
clear. Wint Oran,e celtt
home or dupltx. Rle:Aant 1
}N1n, l\ealtor &t>eOeo. '
Larse W11tclitt Jot • 1're4I .
And cle1r. Tr•de for H1r-'
bo,r arta hO~. or ~ mlnlum, or f~1'!'!'
·-* 19' F'ib!r a:Jaaa JOhnlOl'I
11urler. '68 lllnt cond. 210
OMC 1/0, 1kl, ti1h, 9 pa1•.,
S3.T50 or lrade for Cal, 20.
84~220l.
Trade $10 ht eq 11'1 'E/alde S
BR, 2 Im heull!, rented a t
·sJTo Ptt mo Jl'Oft P'ne I
cle11r Joi or ~nd TD.
0
Broker 846.3226
Pl.per Apa.cnt '58. Low m-
gtnP time. Good rtdio. MY
"'JllilY tor Uneoln ?tlartc m or'
NWflrt Bch TeM..11 Oub
Mfll\btnhip, clymple a1M:
poel, lock•rt. restaurant.
bar, btnquet faclJ, 14 teMll
CTt9 FOR lfnd or! ~T.
What do )IOU hi.vt te tndtT
Llst II but -1r1 Orat!&e
Ctlunt;y's l&rtut n ad trad-
lna ll'!ll.""611
* * * W E :Z::: • 11
/o
•
'
·''""'''•""I"".,. ,., ••• ,.,,., •• ;t , •• ,,. .. ,,,y ., • • . . . . . .
!ter OAILV PILOT
I • l[Il] I ][II] L--1 ,_ ..... .-_j[Il]
· Aprs.,
Furn.
Announcements 500 Announcements When You
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help Wented, M & F 710
or Unfum. 370
d Betty Bruce e CUSHION CUTTER e
WANTED -Want it one "''" 1ra1n. Apply 1" "'"""·
h m f> Johamen It Christensen 898
LAS PALOMAS rig t • • • iJd C.xec II'. l61h Si., N.B.
APARTMJ::11ri'TS OVERWEIGHT LADIES COOK &. COOK'S HELPER
"""' MW hom 1140 Cati one of c. II Somh Coast Community
1 & 2 BR. ful'n .• unturnisMd { _./ifntJllCll llosp, 31872 Cout H\loy, So.
with dishwasher. Heatf'd For \!.'eight reducing program to establish the expet/S OUI" e~'J ii (/ Laguna. 499-1311 e:xt 3M
pool & Janai. Central gas statistics for rapid permanent weight loss, 1)1 /' f d be/ II /Vl f * COOK-Exp. Apply ln
heatl"1:: & alr-eondillonlng. conducted by qualified physical culturists. "f-( IS e OW.. ".../. Secretary person. z..tesa Lanes, 1703
Ga!I & v.·ater paid. Pri\'atc ?<.lust be a mininlum of 20 pounds over· ,,~~~;;;;~~~~~~~~~·~ ,~/~~~__. el"~'!_nne Aero Spa.ct or Ph1u·n1aceuli· ~""="="°~'~·-c~·~"~·~....,,,=='==-I 'PBlio1. Color choiee 'ha&:1 weight, have transportation and not current· -~ cal exper. good. Jn research DENTAL RECEPI'IONJST
<'arpeting. Iv under doctor's care. AU inquiries com· dept for projec t operation. Desk only. Dental eXp. nee. Sa.n~:OO~~st \Varner ,!!0P;l~988
Ptetely confidential. { ~ 'ar.1Rtplir1 )~ { .s.rvm and 1tep11r1 ]Gel I StrvicM MCIRlplirs J~ LEGAL $650 SU & typing. ~~~ccti!~·· ~~e ~~~
North of South Cout aza ASK FOR MISS POWELL -537·5410 · -~ Cost Accounting Call &am~pm, 846-3540. Shopping Center & near San Need very heavy legal Job I ===~'c-.,.,--.,.-,..-,-1 order eo&I system. Gen'l DENTAL Assistant, cl>air· Diego & Newport F'tte:way,. Bullder1 Hou1•cle11ninn S•wlnn/Alter11t1on1 experience. WUI be 1 Ex all h bk
C I U ,_ 1.,. • • o c. per P a&ell · ,,,. a·, '"'pUonist, U· On\·en en y ..,..a ~ a:ime:r ---( ff' k ~ ·~ '" 8 i& oJ ..,.....,.-.,-.,...----secre ary • o ice man· png. guna Beach, expe:rieneed.
a mer & i: 1 · al BRICK block con c re t e QUALITY Maint. Expe:rts Alter.wtions -641·5845 a_ger. S3;iO mo. a tart. 2:0-B Thalia. I ~, 11,,,.J j Rtntals 1r~1 1 Lolt md Found I '.,""", ~,· ~mod•llm•gvdlng. No: personal care o! comm'I &: Neat, accurate, 20 ye:an exp. A/Receivable 840-7163, M.i-946J.
. _ . _ •.1t-•~ resid. properly. Free est. To.le familiar y,•/A/R using data JiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiJ -iob~0 -all.Li•.Coo-. . . ..... .. u Reasonable. 492.0J40. proce1sing methods. 10 Key DRIVER
Office Rental 440 Found (free •ds) 550 962-f94 <H;,O;,U;i,s<'EC'ii-LEA~NCi'l"N;iGC',"-;1-;a-;d;:y:l ·-.-V-"""--·-The--T-ll-,-M-.,,-.-i ENGINEERING $SOO adder. Type 50-60. For furniture: u-uck. Immed.
400 C•rpenter \\'ith experience & o"'n Cust. \lo'Ork. Install & repa.ira, Good sec'y skills + opening. ExJ>er pref'd but
Rooms CORONA DEL MAR ----~E-~---~,--.,.,-1.:.:.;.:;.;;...:.;.;_______ trarup. ph: 8·17-3637 No job too imt Plaster aerospace experience Receptionist not necess. A1ust be dcpend-
COLl.EGE or \\'Orklna girl l & . 2 Room office spaces WHIT tuy e m e. CARPENTRY Call di~clor, heavy public able. Cali 9 Ai\f ·u1 9 PM.
.. '~. l•I, , •• kit & TV I ava1L 0\1.'NER * Ei73-67J7 Found TuVic., B ~~Aakd moo. r MINOR REPAIRS. No Job catfte~ WCJl~~ing FS.loorvi~ pate~. oA1"'1~71og/S"' ~i:.,wer !or lovely firm. oonta.ct, typing W up. ORANGE COAST
..,.,.. 1u-ho~es rt r """"' area 1n Too Small. cabinet in gar. rpeut, .... ows, n etc, repair, O't -= ov-v.wu.
rm. tele, $6;)/mo & up. 3700 NEWPORT BLVD, NB lf'\lne. 833-3796 •><•ei & 0 th er cabi""I•. Resid. & Contmc'I. 548-4111 CERA.J.,tIC We new & EMPLOYMENT 6T';;>-3Ell3. e ON TIIE BAY • -. '"' Asst. Bookkffper AGENCY FOUND reddish brov•n and 5'15-8175 u no MS\lo'er leave Bay & Beach Janltorlal remodel. Free est. Small GAL FRIDAY $550 ~ NCR · FURN 1oon1 Jn prlv, home, 67;..2464 or 541-5032 h' 1 fTl T ,,. bs weloome, 5 36-2426, ..._,ll'<'r. ·machine pay. 12'1 Broadway, C.i\I. &L>llll 'v 1te puppy,,. c. o c-oc msg. at 646-2372. H. O, C11>t1, windows. floors etc. O { roll. A/P, 10 key adding, l"''""'""!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!'""""""I Costa ].less.; Kitch privil 1670 SANTA ANA AVE. C~1 f\farket. on Delmar, C.i\f. Anderron. Res. & Comin'l. &l&-141.l 536-8885 ne gal O C. Sec'y·
+. r\r. occ. 5,1~1061. f'rom 300 sq. ft. 3.)c sq f\. -"!C"~·~"~''="'~"~'!.:'~'~"~orc_•"'."~·~""~'~lwoo:Oon;dU;:Lioopam _::::H::.o.u':.s.::E:::-O::F~CL:.E::A..:N.:::_ 1.T,..re-.-,s,...-, • .,1,..c-.----1 bkkper c 0 m b -!or typing. * DRIVERS *
• II'• PER Yo'etk • up , 57;..246~ or 5-\1...i0.':2 BLACK I hJ I I WOOD production parts' Cl . sal l N E • nta e puppy, w ee cabinet ,\'Ork boat carpea. Complete llouse: ean1ng es o c. Genera l Office O xna.r1ence v.·/k:itchens. $2.i pe:r week Bu1ine11 Rental 445 possible Shep and I.Ab mix. •-·. &1&-5Z19 ~220 6"2..fill2•1 TREES, Hedges, Top, Trim, r--.
-up Apl3. ?itOTEL. 548-9755 Vic of Balboa Penn.,~-~'-~~·-----cul. removed, hauled. Ins. Good '"1fraphics. I< n ° w Necessary! SUITES available, I'\ted1cal Ei73--0296 Carpet Service Income Tax 6"2-4030 Big John. pasle:-up & layout, gen'I ROO~I furn for rent Costa
:'>Tesa. Nice & quiet home
for 11.·orking nian. 642-479~
professional bldg, 17612 -';;;u,;;;;;,-,c-.::::;::-;;-;;:--;:::;-I-------.----Dackgii:>uncl in design, art Must have clean Calif. driv.
Beach Blvd, H.B. Parking: FOUND . Siberian II u' k Y, Diamond Carpet Clearung Sm1·ley Jax Service 1U..;..ph_o_1_,,_._':_Y _____ ,AUINTOSURANCE $375 &: color. Some art education. ing record. Not under 2'5.
Air coed : Heat ing Feb.'9.633-&i02 Avgalz:eroom$8 Portfolio. YELLOW CA8 CO. UC Upholsterer -Quality T I · 186 E 6 Carpeting: Janitorial serv Lost SSS Repairlna: & irulallations • lJth YEAR LOCAU.Y • 11.·ork. Anthony's u Pb . ype 50, handle al In· · l th St., C.M . ... LOVELY room, ;u Wttk.
~lust like dogs. H.B. area.
Call 5.16-20!!1 Inquire SU.ite 8. or call Free Est. 54;,.1317 Qualified • Rea~nable Service. Ei4~ N.B. surance for busy car 410 W . Coast Hwy. Exp'd RECEPTIONisr •
54()...5724. ~llSSING, 13 yr. old alt'd, Cement Concrete w. A. s~nLEY ~I -I dealer. Newport Beach Typing, lile po1ttn1. $19 Delux room, N .B. Sl'ORE building or office !or male: Sealpoinl Si am es eo1 ---,~· =,,,,,,,--,,,,.--Certified P\Jbllc Accounl't By Appt. 646-3939 Newport Beach attL Salary
lease:. Jtlnt Harbor Bl\·d · from l.-11.l'iner Square AptJJ, •• CONCRETE. Floors, 6'17_2221 anytime 646-9666 open. Avail tit June lSth
* &n-1m * location. ll9l sq. ft . Crpl°g.' \\0f'stcliff area. NB, sinc."t: patios, drivt's, sideWl.\ks, BOOKKEEPER \\'rite Clar;sified ad No. 86
air cond. $32.'i/mo. 6l2-8060 midnight 2119/71. Ne c d 1 &labs. Reas. Don &12-8514. Central Business Services [II] MAIL CLERK $375 10 key adder, type, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 BEAUTIFUL room for male,
$31 a v.'ttk. color l"V,
stf'~. pool_ N.B. ~3143.
Vacation Rentals 425
or evn LI 8-2698. ! :sPf'cial diet & medication CEMENT \VORK, no job too eTHE TAX ADVISORS I """''-I i I A sharp trainee who pleasant ph voice. &15.5200 Costa J\tesa. Calif. 92626
ARTISTS, craftsmen ttnt tn· or may die. Plf'a.se call ,;malt, tta.sonable. Free Perm. 0Ui~·Rea1 Rates . . f' I k • C EXP'D EXEC Secretary,
doo ~ or SIS-4~6 1vith Estim. H. Stuflick, M~L5. 328 No. Newport Blvd. ypes, can wor Up • ASHIER •• care:er o pportunity . door-oul r "-PaC'I! MXt door . 0 · H H · f h Part time. general ofc,
lo Poll'ry Sha·• 17 _ s, all)' inlormat10n. PATIOS, wolks, drives, in-pposite oag osp1tal J bW F 1 rom ere. 1 . 1 Established secre!arlal ~ '" For Appl, Call .. ~ nA"" o entad, Ima • 702 c erica , ca1hiering. Fine . .,A d R ••><~•. LOST, gray ca.1 "''/eye: I~ stall new \awns, gaw, break, ~ I ,. lo h' 0 sennce . .:x:n esume: EASI'ER & Summer, 3 BR
& 2 ba, \Valk 10 bch &
pool, \Vkly or monthly, 714:
~ f . . 0 J 548-8668 f I a 1e1 c t ing store. N \Vrite Cla.ssilied ad No. 'f9 APT &: Office $200/mo. 800 ec\IOn .. v•eanng ea .co· remove:. or es. Gordon N. Warren P.A. PRACTICAL Nurse, Good phone calls. BACKSTREET, Daily Pilot, P.O. Box 1560 !IQ. fl. 2316 Ne?.]lOrt BJ\·d.
1
lar.. Vic: 1.7!h & IMne .• BRICK, bl?Ck .\ stur.e work. Since 1951. 675-3345 ret EUicient, . kind. No JR. MISS $325 No. 25 Fashion Isl., N.B. Costa. J\1esa, Calif.·, 9,.,.
C'' ;i•g-· Rel4ard. A:'tL &W-m2, P)t. Free esumates. Call <I J I • smoke or drink. No I .• 1 • a-1;),). 61H 935 95&-39l8 ron1ng overweight. 647_7982 Ofc tra1n1ng in school Combination EXP'D IN-STORE drapery
Industrial Rental 450 'R~E~t;iVA~Ri;',,0-.•,~;~w~"°"k~o;:ld~l;:,;:1,;:hl..::=:::o::::.._______ •IRONING $1.2.i Hit AIDES For convalescence, or 6 mo's exper will •PO~l~HEW~Sll~R* salesperson. 5 day week,
MS-7861
430 Rentals to Sh11re
f"REE R.\f & BO BAiboa ------U"""N"'""T~S,.-0 -11,, P"P, m•I•. Vic. 22nd .. c_o_n_t_r_•<_to_r______ BRING O\VN !{ANGERS elderly care or family o•-. do. ~. · I \Ved thru Sun. Subsiantlal • I d SMALL I .x u r· ...... ,.ul!timeempoyment,days. 1111 ln exchange or g & N"·pt, C~I. !'>i&-2969, ~IY \\'ay, quality home * 54;..3215 * 11omemakers, 5'17-6681. Apply ALLEY \VEST 2106 company-new location open-
cook·g & &:d company. COSTA MESA 673-1-434, i\Tarilyn ---'-.Walls, -ll•n<, floo-IRONING II o. H I W F ~-f ing.7141893-2443
R I'··• ·d •· hn / ... va.u-..... •00 my hOnie .~ p.ar • p anted, M & 710 ..,..,.an ront, Newport Beach, e u-.:u WI ow ~•u l W ~9:>. & 1167. Per l\Ionlh N ~b t all EXPER mo• to .. -rk I• , ,. W ST youn,i:: frlend ly male etc. o r<J oo sm . hr. Bring O"'n hangers. KEYPUNCH $450 across from pier. " nv " 0:; wom~nm\Y~ 0~~ er:: I Immediate Occupancy Siamese cat "'/gre:en & s.t7~36. 24 hr ans. serv. ~l;)..7&11 . A Beller Position I--"--"--"'="-'"----Italian Deli. !\Am's Italian
n pay, P , , I Ne:w 6500 sq. fl. unit, 18th & yellow collar. Vic. Wilson ROOM Additions. L. T. Janitorial Days or Nites. CLERK • Personable ,voman 1.Iarket. 1909 tlarbor Blvd. el~\\'hm! ok. R.¢! s req d. \Vhlttler, ll0.22o po"'er, SI , 548-315.1 anytime. Construction. Single 1tory or ----------T ~('I Min. 6 mo's exper. v.•ho enjoys being "'ilh ~ C.~1.. 54S-7sn
&7.>-72T3 ple:nty of parking. ., E l \ & 1 t SPARKLE Janitorial. \Vln· -J pie; Part time wurk, Dex EXPERIENCED Ge l coal :\IALE student has house 10 ~~·. Ro•·-N""'''· Rltr, LOST or mlMing. 11.n1all ... st m., pans ayou . = ~.. I .. p '" , II I • & 817 15U do\\'S, flool'I', crnts & eonslr .J::: ~ hn. Apply In person repair r.1acGregor Yacht share wi!h olhf'rs for :p.J. ,.. __ ta J\1esa &12-1485 em .... e t' ... n11:es . a.. '~c,.,·o,:=~~~~-~ .,
166 ... m.427:! '--"" '\'hi, nev.•ard for he r 1\\'ALKING Deck Coa tings of cleanup. A ron1 plete comm 'I TIME LIFE BOOKSTORE Corp. 1631 Placentia, C.~f.
·to ., 1tra1 I, · NEW bldg:, 1368·17'28 sq ft. recovery. ~;....t!l7S all types. Lee Roofing Co, serv. F'or Free est call, t f7 ~r.1.vnt11.f . ,,,_..,., ""~"" BUSINESS MGR $12K Lion Country Safari FRY COOK
838·0312· Nr Baker & Fairview. l LOST. bei~ pug d 0 g c .M. 642-7222 frtt est. _oo_i--0671 __ . ------~1:!i.:.:'or:;.,.;~ ~~:::';'"'!= ?<.1ust have hosp. e;itper. Laguna Hills, Calif. i\fanager trainee (new chain)
R00;<.1t>tATE needed to )T. lease. Sullivan, 540-4429. wlblack fa('t. f\1ele 9 mo's Additions * Remodeling Painting & Plron.t ''6·111& incl. acctni;?., credit, neat and, v.·ell a-roomed ap-
r;hare 2BR, 2 BA apt. PLACENTIA Ave -1000 &<l old, ~rona de\ ~tar . Ge-,'·" • Son•. Lo·o. Po perha-ing · COASTAL ply in person, great op. Balboa Is til June. Fern ft un i ts, $100/mo, 61J.-XJ12 Gn-w.ii"'"" * 519-2170 _____ .. _. ____ Payroll Clt'rk $-150 supervis. ' poi=tunity Lany·s Golden
""'900. Soth l --' 5j7 79CX) YOU SUPPLY THE PAINT Ex""r. Bank Teller $-WO Chicken, ror. Beach Blvd. er auu, · FEi\fALE Beag!_.. losl 311 LJo'd Co·tr. R•m·,•io'•g ,. MALE/female or couple 2 " " ._ uu " \\'ill paint any rm $10. General 0£1 icc $j.j(l & Indianapolis H.B.
B:'. fum Balboa Penn. ;100. !0~1l~IND. l3cu~~AL vlc BeHacb Bl\•d & L!bert1Y Addlllons, Pla:i,s1, ~1:)'0Ul Int / e:xter. Frtt est. 4~ yn Advertising Secretary ssoo STAT CLERK $500 , AGENCY GOOD foster home ,,..·anted ~l716 Jl/lr .NII ...,. St, .B. Ans \'o'e r I O Karl E. Ke:ndiu ...,.,..JjJ7 e:x~·. Also <'".....,nler \\'Ork, o. I C I 1· $'~ I I -• · I p b mo . .,,,,.. , * San Oemente 496-1840* "'·-841 357 ,. .... ,,.. .,.,ctf ary ons rue ion .;:;:. Heavy stat reports & or retard= gll' -:
LADY •·-I I 2 B scv,,~fAI-:J.'~0';;'~.,;;ij~4~ci<j;llPP,cl'.F~u~r!n~it~u~r~e'.,,..::-,-.,---l any kind. MD-7CM6. Sec·y Stock l\lkt exper ,..,~ 968-6127 aft 4 pm. 10 1'"""' ove Y r Rent•ls Wanted 460 .::::::...:;=:...:.::..:.=---I 10 K Y •Pl C~f. w/M!me. Nr occ S'.\fALL mostly black puppy, ~ , ~ . . No \\'astini:;: Sec'y i\1arkeling Dept S.lOO ana · e • ex-' HAIRDRESSER for LaiUM
&:. so Frwy. 545-8729. 2 CAR Garage in Costa male, \'le i\farincrs Dr. N.B. FURNITURE ~tnpping. any *WALLPAPER* t Girl ore-F igures s.;oo penses. reports, etc. I Beach shop, Some IolloWlllJ
•-•• 1 ;\ns"·ers lo "Poncho'' or average chair or rocker """'-"yo" •all "'!a'" t'/Cha,._, Bkk""rConstr "ruvi ACCOUNTANT .. ,,, ••. Up 10~,. -mm. or WILL share my charming ftfesa. To "" us""' or •·""'·p".· 0 ,6_,,...,.,. ,;tripped $5. &12-34-4:i ... ,..... .. -.. -... -"""" " .,.. v .. u l ~~-~·r~l~b~·~·'~I t•=~~~~ I ,i'~lo~~~~~-~C~all~~T~crrv~~~;:Th:•; I :~'~"~~~~·~~·~~~~!~~~~~~~~~~ 1548-J#I ~lru Sr. Acct Constr. $181\t Just created automaled sys-. rent spii.ce, Phone eves . ..__. 15 e ...,..rn ome:, · ·-..-General Services [ Aft 6pm: 673--0283 Real Estaten; 54&-2313 LESCO Pain!ing Contractor Jr. Tax Accountant Stale/ KEY TAPE $425 tem. Need DMV know'! w/ 497-1315
2 Adi! working girls, desire I 1 ~ Jlu.,band Busy'.' Call ?ttoose Int/ext. 2 ~tory speciaJi.,t, f rd $l0~1 k~ company. Start $6000 -.~H~E~A~D~W~A~l~TR=E~SS-~~,-o~,·I
Garages for Rent 435 2 BR furn, yrly rt'ntal nr lnslructlon ~ 545--08al afte:r &-Repair Also, a c co us t . ce il. -::C=•:ll:F:o=r=A:ppo=:in:l=m='="=' := Attractive gal \v/6 mo's Call Hele n Hayes. , wk. Dinner House. Perm.
STORAGE Garage for rent bch area, $180. 673--7597 aft ';;;;m;m;m;miiiii~iiiii~I G"i;";:'r,"~..S.;;.;rv;-~M~o~sl'-..:The':"ln~g~s 11prayini:;. Lie & ins. • keypunch or keytape ! Interviews 9 to 12 noon.
$20/mo. lluntington Beach. -'~'230:....::p~m~--~---~ I Gardening 6~:>-2399 Accounting" & clerical exp. .. TYPIST SA.,1'S SEAFOOD 16 2 'l 8
64&-2687 Misc. R•ntllfl 465 Schools & PAPERHANGER, f!ock, fo11, 160 \Y.P.i\1. \Vork ,y/targe Pacific Hwy. Hunt. Bch.
U •--,,:-'.".'.-::::---~-575 PROFESSIONAL._ Pruning, vinyl, m•ar., estimatrr.. the Exec. scc·y Constr to $600 I f!'O\\i ng co. Call Sally Hart. HOUSEKEEPER, live: ln rok motor homes, tra er, instructions .. ~ Secret"'"" S.)..?Q boat, etc.. l652 Npl Blvd, Cl\I. • FENCED storage area. ----------1 free v.·ork, sprinklers, aera-Hangma n, 5 4 7-5 S 4 6, -... L motherles~ home. 3 &hl
642-2S2l, &12.5106. o!I surfaced; Costa ?.tesa. Discover a Great New lion, pests, disease. v.·eed Schv.'&rlz Salr~. Drapcry/Crpt S65D PAYROL $475 RECEPT./SEC'Y children. 833-2315 Jrvinf!.
Call 646--0281, 962-7813. CarHr With The rontrol. Clean up. jobs. GOOD iasl & rteal painlrr BookkeeJ)('r $433 Jifanual payroll expcr. Type-50 ,\·.p.m. Handling HSKPPR/BABYSJTI'ER ~~~~,G=i ~:~ ~~~~~~~~~~ Terms: George, ~5893 ( y,·ants lrn1pory or part-PBX-Gen'J Orlice to $375 thru taxes for small mone:y, ln!erviev.ing appli-!or teacher w/2 school age
pm only. ;I ~ AIRLINES ALS GARDENING 1imr 1\-urk :>IS-6801 RUTH RYAN AGENCY office. cants. Friendly personality. children, l\Tarch thru June:,
PeniONls , .. for iarde:niJll & small . 1793 Nev.'J)Ort, C~l 646-4~ Star!$370.Cal!Helen~layes. schl days only z; hn \\ic
Office Rent•I 440 W landscaping 1trvlt"l!s. call CUSJ'O:\f Pa~r .Hanging. m-li931 Beach. HB s.17-9617 SL. ~f/have own transp. ;;;;;;;;m;m;m;m~~ A natural for ym1ng people 54~198. Serving Newport, tcr/exter. p~a1ntmg. Save on SEC'Y TO PRES 9S2-/::i03 alt 6:30 SUPER-DELUXE QUALITY who want exclte:!'lent plus! Cdl\1, Cn!lta l\fesa, Dover papPr. 531-1991. I Accounti Sec' $500 A/PAYABLE $525 SH, type. lite hkl(png, \"ork I "====~-,~-~
1-2-3 room, up to 3,000 1<1· P•rsonals 53-0 Ticket Agent? Air Fn!:1ght? Shotts, \\'e11tcliU. p A INT JN G : JI ones t , Co ng f YN SH "! t be . d fo r lhe-numbt'r t man in lhe HOUSE\VIVES · 3 openh;ig
fl oUlee 1ulte1. Inuned. oc-1 Stalion 3 g, n t" ~e:rva. NG guarante d w 0 r k Lic'rl I mpany pays ee. o · i1 us experience Pftin1e. Aver. $3 per hr.
cu-pancy. Oraflie County. 1'lJLLY LICENSED * Lions? Ramp .or travel ~ lANDSCAPI . * Local r:r s Call .67.)-5740 Very fine stable pres~ge co. voucher s stem. Extra n11tion, Terrific fringe hen-No exp. ~. \Ve ITBin. for
/.irport Irvine Commerc-Renowned Hindu Spirihlalist nt" \Ye·u train you for New I awns, sprinklers. ft • · I Trust bckgrnd desirable. ! . dl f t'fits. Stan S600. Call Sally appt. call ~tni. l\1uller
Complex, adj. Airporte:r Advice on all mailers. ~;; ·and mo d Y or nite drains. "''alks, arbors. pa-" J. . Call l\liss Laura. S.'J7.S122, rien Y 0 cs. }(art. * 54thl770 *
Hotel Ir Restaurant, bankl, Love, i\tarriag•, Businr.ss IV "· 1 d "1· a · uos lcnces Lic 'd contr 13 PAINTING/papering, 18 Y" Abigail Abhol Personnel HSKPRS Empl-pays 1-. e inc u e P acement as-' .. --. }I bo LI & • RECEPTIONIST ,. " San Diego & N'pt F'wys. Reading5 given 7 days a &istance. yrr. Joe. f"Xp. 536-l.22J, in ar r . area. e I Agency. 2.10 \V, "arner, George Allen Byland Agney
UNCROWDED PARKING week, 10 am. 10 pm. JOHNSON'S GARDENING bonded. Re:l s furn. 642-23."15. Sui te 211. S.A. BOOKKEEPER $600 Bf'ini;: bt'autifut can be ex<'il-106-B E. 16th, S.A. 547--039;;.
LOWEST RATES 312 N. El Camino Real, Est. 21 }T!I. Approved for Yard . care, cl 1!'. 8 n. ups, PAINTING, professionnl. All I' APT. MGRS. EXEC. litust have public ac-In~ in lhis small shop. Ltre
Vwner/mgr. 7172 DuPont Dr. San Clemente Veterans. Eligible institution planting, 5 pr 1 n kl er s. 1vo ~ k. g u a r n. Co Io r $fiOO + 2 Br apl P~stigc typing l.: meeting: pu blic in
Rm . 8, Newport Beach 492-9136. 497-0076 under the federally iru;ured !l62-2035 i;pcc1al1.'ll. 64S.70Sl; 547-~4·11 t'Xe<'. ap!~. No Children or counting experience. fashion. Start $300. Call Hel-
833-3223 Courtesy to Brokers SINGLE? WIDOWED? studenllounprogram. AL'S Landscaping. Tree INT. & Exte.r. Painl1n11:. pt't§. Call i\lills i\lelanie. A pern1. job, not just e:n Haye&.
Divorced? Over 21? removal. Yard remOOellng . Lied, ins. l'ree est . 30 yrs 5;,7-6122 Abig11i\ Abbot Per tax season . $100 MONTH
All UtllltlH Pold
Nictly derorated ofli ce:, am.
For a self explanatory n1es-
sage 24 hrs a day call
496-4801 01' 541·99!11
pie parking. 1860 B N•v.1>0rt -,.~OR~l,-d-.,-,-onl~y-, ~15~--m-,-,-,.-..
Bl\•d., Costa J\1e.~a. special ;5, 17"34 Beach
W. E . lechenmyer, Bl\•rl., H.B. 847-9213
Airline Schools Pacific Trai;h Muling. lot cleanup. exper. Chuck, 6-'y.()809. sonnet Agency 230 \V. \Va1·· '°'
610 E. 17th, Sant• An• Repair sprinklers. 673-1166 lST CLASS Painting & ner. Suite 211.' s.A.
54~6596 EXPERT Japa nese papcr-hang}ni::. ?1ter/Exter.,ATTRACTIVE v.'Qman, retail ORDER DESK $475
PIANO LESSONS gardener .. complete garden· f ree est. 5,15.34.,9 !<Bies. Sal & Sun only. Ten-' . ' '
\·our home. Certified ln~ service, Free e s t . PAINTING/papering. 18 yr'i n\s AUair,&lj...()j.\j. Xlnttyp1st\\hokno"s l
Realtor
1860 Nev.oport Blvd .• C.l\t
Call 646-3928 Evts: 67J.4j77
teachers. l\1usic Syr.te:ms. 6'15-0345. I in Harbor area. Lie & A~lBULANCE DRIVER Juli order desk procedure.
DANCE lessons: Latin & 1.lr. llathroek, &16-1368. LA\\'N care & garden v.'Or\(. bonded . Ref's furn . 642-2J:i6. timl!', single, mt under 21. Excellent future.
American. Introductory oil-EXPERIEi\'.CED Te ache r Light hauling. Ex P ~ d · Plaster, Patch, R•palr E~,pref. s.tS-J..156.
er S4 per hr. 673-1155 ~d" Jiluden\.'1. Accordion, RcaMinablr. Call ;,.&3-9735
SALES
$600 To start + romm. Col-
ll'gl!' or gd sales exper, Call
Sally Hart.
540-6055
2790 Harbor Blvd.
FOR immediate 0ttupa1K.'y
in Orans;e County'!! IT'IO!il
,Nwe.ly g:at'Mn comm'! com-
plex. Comm'! profer.1. &
medlcaJ auita, in Slln Juan
Capls'traoo a.d,J to Bank of
America. ~803."1
*PATCH PLASTERING Au to ALCOlIOLTCS Anonymous. Piano on Popular, Classical. EXPER. Ha,\·aiian Gardener All types, Froe estimates 2 SALESMEN A/RECEIVABLE $450 I Cosla Mesa
Phone S42-11l7 or \I.Tile to theory, 54;;..7571 Complete Garden ing 1 ~ A_. 3 b. ti &:-::::::::::: ~~~~~~~~~~!lrSe~rv~i~,,.5-~K~·a;m~al~•n~i~. ~6'~1Ho.;;~·6~., Call 540--Ei82j 1 eL·u coni ana on new Need A/R experience , P. 0 . Box 12'll Costa Mesa. PLASTER . pa 1 r h. Rm . used auto ~~smen. Excel-' I
Social Clubs 53~ 1~ GARDEN sc r vi c r, main-• Jeni commission & demo + EDP knowledge for I Strlictl endRtpllra tenanlX'. ,clean·~Pr seeding ,\dds. Neiv ii·ork. F a>ee IAn. hosl!Jtalization & med· great Santa Ana !irm. BALBOA~ BAY CLUB c. ;";;;;;';;;;;;~·~·;;: 1_;";'~· ;C;•;ll;'92-8>;::::o:::56:-,_~--1 <';;"~1=""Ii"'='=· _,....._._583_•_l_I_>_ ~Ill. ~ ! ,_ ~ ~ ' ·
l\1E:\TBERRHTP FOR SALE I CO~!PLEiE yard Care . Plumbing SEE AL TETREAULT
DESK SPACE
222 Forest A venue
U.gune Beech
«J<."'6
* 54&--0481 * Babys·itflnn Cle11nup, trash hauling by PLU 'G f. SALES MANAGER
··• }ob or mo. 897-2417, 84&-0932 N;1~: too ~;,~~lit HARBOR AMERICAN OMV $500
COSTA MESA Gardening St>tvl-,,.--• 642_3128 • 1969 Harbor, Cost• M•s• Must ~ave auto e:"<per .
1 · Loat and Found )[SJ PRE-SCHOOL by experienced Japanese Roof AUTO p OL I S II ING & including bookkeep-
lSlh & J\lonrovla, ~) day + • 9GMll83 e Ing o~ n. I · E 'd 1'ng r..1A pos tioni;. xp •
lull day aes&ions. Planned H•uling ·LEE Roofing co. RooflnJt of t'ngine clt'11.ning & JH1ln1-buf-OESK SPACE Found (free 11d1) 550 Pm'1'8m, hOt lunches. AgeR ---....,.-----1 All type!!. Re:oowr, repaira. ling. ~lary open. Gm"''h
105 N El c.. . R I 2.S. hrs 6:30 Af\1-Ei:OO Pl\1. TREES trim med, lop~. roof coatlni:J. Llcfbooded co. l\fETRO CAR '"ASH 0• mrno •• BEAUT. Gernan Shep,,.nl $18 wk·CO•IPAREI ,. • ., ~'"'" Lot.\, Rar•gcs c I e a ne d . -Soft Cleme1tl• .,......_, since '47. 6-12.7222. ~ Harbol Blvd. c.r.1. ..... _..'ltl fem 11!e, \\te-11 cared tor. Vi c ot-838.5237. eainting etc. Yo9 Mll)O _ii, -A r. "' "" ·...,,,.;I T. Guy Roolif!I, DeaJ So. San1A na. a1...-1l"'. 31.~ CHRJSTJAN -i•·r wi ll "·e do 11 .any 1me . . d -'I .. ~" 1 , •788 Dll'trl. I o my ov.·.1 '14i:>rk. LARGE, airy ollieoe wf~m.... \VllTTE Sal'l)Oy«I Husky Vic babysit. l\ly hon1t'. Fenced r..rR~nah r. G·l . ...,i &1~2780. ~9590.
private office & h a th . "Tht' Ran c h·' nrr:i. yird. Lunc hr a, YARD, Gara!:" cle.anups,l.,O.:.:..=+:CC--"-"7---
BABYSITl'ER \V&nled, relia.
\\'On11n. Odd days & e\'f!S.
Own trRnsp. Hunt. Harbour
area. {2131 592-3007. UtillMew fUmbhed Sl~ mo. SJ2.5:)9-I 3/8 I Pomona/Wilson arPa . 0 1 ll'N'S dirt ivy removal, skip Sewing/Alteratlonl
l.A.guna N\iuel nr S.n Dleao .,,_ 7 I (I b khOe 963-87•· BABYSl'ITER. Ea' I h l u I I F 831_1400, Bl.ACK Lab melt' "'rarlng "-II: hr. SJ .~ "·k. 5-18-l.'m:i °"-f'r, llC · 1 ;), A LTERATlONS. restyling, al'f'A. 3 Sehl age children.
wy. _._1 ~f If S65 71 he Vic lluntuigton Dcach 1 NE\\"PORT Jfci,qh1' ~a. Lrg llAULl:-iG, ~n 'I cleanup, E:'lpert fitter. Top ref's. i\lon-fri. 644--0367 COP.ON~'uo:d ar 0~ct·1 ·, 530--0123 I y•nl ,. ..... box Balanced fl'('(' l't'f'\'. Handyman. Reu. N.D. a~a. 6--16-2/CM call Buuthw ecor. 1v1• OCll-• .... ' ~ 6-16-5S48 R h Call BABYSJ'M'ER/comp. f'Vf'' tion. Parldng. r rt. Ba w/ l FULL gro"n ligl!'r toUipeo lunch. Xln't rnre_, &l:>-2T;i-i · ul · & wk ends, 1 oldf'r child.
sbo"'tr. Owner 673-31>'8. m11Je cat found In ~tesa ~fY hOm<", 11ge: 2!.:r-5. Lrg TRASH & Ganie clea~up, f"IGIIT innation! N11tlonl'll r.tay IJve.Jn. 968-6127 aft 4.
507 B11nk of Amer.
Tower
One City Blvd. West
Orang•
' Coco;
2131 'W•stcliff Or.
Newport Beach
e BUSBOY e
9.3 pin. 5 days A v.·k.
APPLY TN PERSON
Coco~
Ja:1hi Oil
J:lfanl
Junior
Accountant
HIGH SCHOOL DIPLO.
J\TA <SO~IE COLLEGE
PREFERREDI, KNO\Vl.,
EDGE OF ACCOUNT-
JSG OR RELATED
AREAS. E:\'PERIE~C·
ED TN PAYROLL AND
Tl i\IE KEEPING PRO.
CEDURES AND ~IETif·
ODS.
Apply in person only
ml liARBOR,BLVD ••
COSTA i\fESA
ATLANTIC
RESEARCH
sr~ttms Division of
the Susquehanna C.Orp.
EquAI opportunity e_mp\oyer
i\tal~/}~l!tnale
NEWPORT BE.AO{ Clvlc
eenltr, aoo rt to 1<0> r1.
ANw. • :;tcutarta..I,
&TS-lllll
Vf'ntc, 5'1~1791 lncd yd. Oldf'r i•hlldren 7 ddy!. $10 11 load. Free designer'& biktnia Sl0.9a. BEAUTY OJ>t'r \\'fcllentelc.
FOUND: r.talt Sian1tl't vie: bt'loro/arT M:hl, &!6-00-.t:> 1f'JI. An)·Hm<', S.lS.-5031. Brlni;: your ma I c r I a I . fie:'!. hrs. Rent or comm
V11n 8~ A A1.11tin C.M, 8'\lJYSJ'tTTNG 1fy' l'lollr or ~\GVING, -Ga.raa•..t.clt~p 1 _:6J"4C.-4::009::::., --"''-----1 .U-2S11 lf.8 ,.
(714) 639-6050
~. A Ill.VINE PER50NNa. ...
DISHWA'SHER , ·~, _.
S NEW offlct'I, 17871 Beach
Bl. Lowest renta: SU.2525
or 21!1! !!M-«11.S
omcE fl.lr "'-nt-3.U E. i11h
St. C.llt. f'•rrnltl>ed, t1hl
paid, l••t ~1>24l0. .~~-------
962-GJOO. v.·re:k, nny houn: my homt. k Ute hauling. Reasonhle. EUROPEAN dre1sm!lking ~000:,::,~K~K~E-'EPC,,:ERC,:...-,~1"-,-,~.,-,-,·.1
&12-7316. fo"Ttt e~tlmates. 64$-1602 all t'tltilom f!l!l'l'I, Ve.ry pertc~ In bookkttpin,;
ENF.RGETTC J'OUni;:: n>0ther Tiie IAJlf'St draw tn the Wcsl -"-"-""'_b_l_,._sn-_. -'-"-'-· __ f'WJlatnentals. SalAty OPl!'n.
"·il l babysil "'<'rkl~·. Baker f'1,t 1~si1lts are }ll!I a phone A good want ad ii a pl 1 Jfe_alth plan, relintr1'11'1ll plan.
&· fn lrvil'w 111't'a. 5l7-~)9j2 t!'~ll 11"·ay~4~48 _ 1nvt'1tment_ Pl'arock Jn!ur1ncr, .fOI
f'OUN IJ : Darhihund, male.
vie P3ula rino I. fa!tvit'y,·,
c.~1. ;,.,;1.3032
FOUND whilt" An~m rat I
1\k, "-'.,· Cu11istrano Bt'11<'h.
4!.16-lZIZ. 3,9
I
Turn unulled l!('n1~ into quick
cal'ih, cell 6~2-5im ·~'->==========~ ____ ,.
' ' •
Glrnn('yl"f. Laguna Beacfl.
494-1 087 11-1rll. Bradley.
• 835-8461 Apply In Person
71 F 111hlon Island
Newport Beach
I WE. lllh let fl"\'lne) C.lit.
642·1 470
lr-.'VE~"TORY Control.
pin:::. Typini:. Exp'd
642-3412 N.B.
$hi~
only.
~-___,l[Il) [ l[ll] I l[ll] I l~I
Mqn<l.1j', Mmli 8, Im OAILV l'ILOT:f
J~,~! ;;;;;"";;;;;""°"~l~[i I -~~md]~l 1 T-t~ I[{' L ·~ .. -~~ -
111 LO~'~k!E ora.rce: •trtpe ao.ts,Rent/Ch•rflrtOI M1>blleHomt1 t3S 1 :;.0 ;;;:~e,Part1 £ m-...: tten, houae pet. WI')' ·(
SERVIC£ ataUon. exper., 11. WHY BUY * AUCTION * h'tendly, nttda &aod home. 32,.,...' -~-._-____ ...;._;... 1 ·-::::--=-:::-::::-::".:'.'"-
Help Wanted, M & F 710 Help W•nted, M & F 710 Help W•~ted, M & F 710 Fum1ture 111 MJsullaneous
Ana ..
Reuben;
Costa Mesa
No11 ln1ervle1\•lng
DAY BUSBOYS
l2 10 2 Mt!lt
DAY HOSTESSES
II 10 3 s.blfl
mecn, helptw penn., alot 541;$82 ,.,.. days att • 7•-• 0uV. IUBy THE BEST OF
salary. 1404 N. Coast,. La· Fine .Furnaure 6P~t 319 equtp d. Filh.lns or Chll> BOTH WORLDS
...... Beach. ..,-3322 FURNITURE? & App!la,..,., I ;N:iiEEO""'"""°""=-;:home:--o.,,...,_-..:::.;yd I :"'"=·.::.Sl.l-=:1134.=----For • "''"""" home, JO•
SERVICE Ettab'd. Fuller AucUorw Friday, 1':(0 p.m. f9r·lovable whlte male aw.. Bolts, S.U to9 maintenance am archlttt\lf.
Brus.h rte, $12>$175 wk. to Be Flexiblel Windy11 Auction Barn dard poodle mix. 543-0&13 alb knpreraiVe cteslp $e<e
st., also pt. tin1e ~~745. Rent mo. to mo, with 1J75* Newport. CM 646-8611& or 836-4493. 318 COLUMBIA 2G 'Mark J1 ~lint new "Village
Social Director 100% Purchase Option Behind Toey'& BlQ:. Mat'L HAVE S£>vera1 lovely older Custom l.nterk>r. X1nt cond. ' by Ltvilt Mobile
Experienced, relocate, call Jnd. item wectioa APT. ens stove $40, (:lf!rfectly llittens and Younc cats U:i ~~k>nally main~. S.VS'B'.:von H~~J'o'R* al
Lora,ine, We1tcllH Person. 24 Hr. Dely. clean. GE refrlg 14. ~. 1lw to good ho mes. MOBILE HOMES
nel Agency, 3)43 We1tcliU CUSTOM Kelolnator ~1._ .... ,. "'""'· 64+.7~92 3/9 'TO ERICSON 23, Wt.II equip. 1
0 NB 1:1.:U'I.. ''ft ....... I t nd SJ • 425 Bl.kn St., Costa Mesa r., · · Fumltvre Rental new. aaerltl<:e. ""tsuo P.U. LOVABl.E friendly med. sz ......... x n co • Pl • u• w/, 11 p 11 d I d Juat S. cf S.D. "-· at Harbor TELLER NEEDED 517 W. 19th. C.M. 54!.3'81 1200 -1-ton $475. All \vht cocker te rrier mix pup 2131792-8724. es re · 'l.1~;:70
Savings & Loan needa &irl A'\8.helm 774--2800 mechanically tops. 21 t.i. J mo. Needs gd home fncd I ;;,=~~~~-----..,..""T'~"-==--
J oa,s . ~Ion. thru Fri. who is mature anlbltious LaHabra 6%3708 Continental, CM yd . .5J9..8400 or $1Ul 3/9 KITE ll>l, Good cond, com-NOW OPEN
""
bl ' bllc0 DRAFTING ADULT l I '·-nd. plete rac~ rear, '°''"· CONTEM • Apply * a a e to meet the pu . 1LLNESS makes it a oecessl-table desk type, eroa e ~set bou yard dolly. 548-nts . PO..
3 10 ;;1 pm for Jntv. If you att, we may have a ty to sell all 10 rooms metal, lockina: drawers on Register A.KC Needs klve. 1 ~==~---'----LAGUNA HILLS 1~ \\'. Adams permanent position for you or near new Medi t . both sides and tn middle 530--0153 3/8 21' VENTURE, Sl..EEPS 4, i3:r)l RIDGE ROUTE DR.
Costa ~lesa as a teller • new accounts furniture. Cheap example 8' adjustable top wtth swtwl 4 14 x 6 Chevy rims. head, tr.Her, loe.dJ of (Q>rner of Moulton Pkwy)
Sec'y/Mfgrng $500 clerk. Frlnp:e benefits, -..-..i black naug, sofa & Joveseat chair, all &ood condition $75. 54S-8579 318 extras!! * 531--0831 * * LAGUNA HILLS
Sec'y/Gen'I $500 * SALESWOMAN * v.·orking oondltio111. Sta:;~ newr used $150. (213) _54.c!>-0530~-~· ~~----lfORSE fertilizer, 20381 S.W~ VICTORY 21', 3 u.Us, out-Prerttge adult rommuntty ad.
Payroll EDP $47~, Full tune. i;-........ rienced, salary depends on previous 925-3622. e SKI FAMILIES Cyp SA. H board motor, Moving must Jacent to Leisure \\'orld.
kk
......... ~ ress, . ts. 318 II 842-•-A/ R 8 pr to $450 I be lier dres.ses. Xl.nt. salary, working eX}lttlence. We wiU r-.tOVlNG must sell maple Reserve now~ Cabin at lo.lam. se · lO'lo: alt 5 IW&-.5237 &autifU.l. lllm)Undlngs a1J
Receptkmist to $550 eomm1ss1on and benefits. train. furn. good cond. Also, bar moth r-.tounta.in. Slps 7. Fire-14' GLASS boat, Like new, luxury appointments. 'put.
P /Time Gen' I Ofc to Cali for appl. 540-jQ5(J Ext. \VORLD SAVINGS & LOAN I rumpus atttsa. 54~at32. I pl, etc, $18-$20 pe r day. I Pl and 111.J), -=G~"~•~t~lor-='l,:,"o-hl::ng~. ;...,~~ ting green, hobby Mop,
$160 30 292 s. Coast, t.a.&:una Bch. 1392 Galy.•ay Ln, C.M. 531-3374 days, 1 · ts ~ . rs I . • &a6-9550 • much more.
JOSEPH MAGNIN •TELEPHONE OPERATOR LIKE new, twin bed corner MAMMOTH MNTN. '-;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;~~~I CAPE COO CAT BOAT ---=CAU.= -
Equal opp'ty employer FEMALE group w/table & lamp, Moblle home & cabin, Income ~ lB', fbrbla. (213) 83t-.388l. 8 x 32 M.uterbuilt.lo--i JR.\/lNE PERSONNEL • SALESWOMEN * 2'l8 Forest, Laguna Beach qulltftl rovers & bolsters. J1roper1y, Sale or trade. ogs IS4 Boats, Sllps/Doc:ks 910 2t cabana w/extra bath.
SER.VICES•AGENCY M"""· pl timo. Apply alt •• TRAINEE.. 6'13-469l. '""'" Completdy rum. 12250.1
t88' E.
17
th lat Irvine) C.M. 2pm, Young Matern It y Depot Mgr. Sales-Serv. Elec· 3 ~S of turn, Liv'g t:m• Muslcal lnitrumenti 822 ST. BERNARD, AKC reg, 15 TO 25 FT. lllps avall. i64>-~2::1::59;..,. ____ ~-
642
_1470 Shops, So Coast Plaza c .r-.f. trolux Corp, Imm. empl. Ding rm & bdnn, all. tme Deautilul markings, 11 wks. for power boats. Private Motor Homes 940
•• SALESWOMAN •• For int. ph. Gri!Wald 8.10 furn, Also 1 Norge refrig. * FENDER Super.reverb, Needs love, attention .1 lagoon. Water a. elec. avail.
,..,..,..,..,..,..,_..,..,,
1
Expt>rienced, career minded am only 496--2383. * 646-5330 * original owner $275. or best ~~1 sax>. 67~7646 or Baya!de Village, 300 E. 30' DODGE, slttp1 6, ·100~
KEYPUNCH. 1 to v.·ork into Assistant Mgr. WAITRESS E p• 8' SOFA, never used, quiltf!d otter Coast Hwy, NB sell contained. 5 spd trans.
Typist. Excellen.t fo~ir~. ~ in fine ladies clothing chain. * · X D Doral. acotchguarded SJ25. * GIBSON smaU electric AKC Lhasa Apso Pups, WANTED: Slip for sailboat, _l5000"";;..:'::.':.•:;";-:::.::;::._~
cal. Call Loraull'! 64;>-2710, I App 1 y i 11 person, Not under Zl. NO PHONE ?-.t atchini love.seat S 7 5. guitar SIOO. or best Champ !fired, Top qua •'ty, length 77'. Beam 7.5'. T railers, Travel 945
\\'eslcliff Personnel Agency, BACKSTREET No 25 CALLS. Apply in person, 535-1955 * 5'-JS-7890 Eves. Ad<iruble, Shaggy, Litt!~ 544-Ual, 544-1310 afl 6
21H3 \VestcllH Dri\'e, N.B. }"ashion Isl. N.'B. . Surf & Sirloin, 5930 W. Coast SOFA g• green, good con-WURLITZER Spinet piano, people lovers. 714/487-SSGl. SUP available, up to 20', TRAVEL Trailer 23' "in
LVN-3:30 to 11:00 relief 31\ift.; Sales Hwy., NB. dltion, $50. fl keyboard. Spotless walnut WElMARANER, ma I e 1, near Lido. Call model fully self cont.' Like
Park Lido Convalescent YOU CAN MAKE ..,.__.~W.__,_A_N_TE_D~.-* 546-9768 * finish. Must &ee. $475.1 AKC. ch line, 6 wk, 1ht1, * 673-&tSO * new, $5300. 91)3.,2297
Center 642-8044 $125 4 PIECE Bedroom suite, 962--6.521 ~~~5!1 pet, hnt, 1ho. ''11oo=-~1-,,~s""10-',""•"ge"-"'-~9~12 TraJlen, Utility 947 LVN·ll~OO to 7:00 relief. • nlOCa walnut. 646-3621 or DRU~! SET, Complete .I . --:1~4;;'.:T;,;o:;nde~m;;;,;T=--r•""l'°le-r::.;;
Park Lido Convalescent Experienced, 1st class 962--7566 Sac~~ce Sl'15. Excellent
1
AI~DALE temer puppies, LOCKED, fenced storagt for \\'Ith 4 wheels. AU sleel v.-eJd.
Center. 642-W44 on C:!:~~~Lbasis maintenance man for BEAUTIFULLY g ra i ned cond1t1on. all accessories. 9 ~k!. ~t _pty, Champion boat or campers. :50<: per ed co.nstru<:tion. ~" Steel
i\taintenance Man yacht work, Newport brand new w a.1 t tabl 548-Sl48 eves or Y.ttkend. I sired. 54:>--1058 . foot, per month. Ca 11 selling the "'Orld's safest re PHONE . n u e ~-deck plating. Will sell or
-• -"I 1!!59 CADlu.AC
A.m CONOmONE.R.
RADIO
RADIATOR
Wll'iDSlllELD \l.11PER
MOTOR I MU~ or~ 'OSE or n-mst
ITEMS THIS WEEK-EN
542-3120
FOR APPOINTMDn' ,+
Autol Wanted
-.,yE~PAY TOP t , CASH .
for used cara 6. trvcb, Mt
call Us tor free e&Umatea.
Gr.ilTH c:mOLEJ.
Ask for Sain Manqa
U2U Beach Blvd.
Huntington ·Beach
8(7.Q)37 Kl
WE PAY CASH
FfiR YOUR CAR
CONNELL
Ct4EYROLET
2828 Harbor Blvd. I
Coat& Mesa 54611200
TOPOOUARI ,., : I
CLEAN USED CARS I ~~a16ci'R'e.. l i
ROCINS FORD
2060 HJ\rbor Blvd.
Costa Mesa
642-0010 Full lime, li\•e on premises baby furniture by way of a a a. !213 677-971-"'/exterunons $100. 644-2229 Office Furniture/ IRISH ~tte~ pupp1e1, AKC trade for pickup. 3166 Sicily,
unfurn. apt + S250 per mo. 1 h · 1 fl ed b ) J G S I 112 Equip 824 champion llJ'l(!s $125. Call fMesa Verde) C.M. ~lust be bendable. Apply tee n1co or 1 m narrat Y ~ •rage • e • S-12-2!!03 ][i] "'""'=~""';;;:,::,,.-.,,,-!LOOKING IDr a car froiii
at office, 160 \I/. \Vllson r~~~~ ~~-For further *Ex"'.~ ~ECR1;;;;~6,. ~ CE~tENT mixer, elect $100, CA LC UL AT 0 R Tolal la ;iO'C-LO~Eng-==-l"°~"'h""Sh""'"oo-p~Oog~-.-,-.. · I Tt'INpOrtat ion rh 2 WHEEL utility trailer with private part;y. FJlher Ford.
10 AM Wed 3/10. 1 • · P ·• ma ure s camping tent 12•l(16 • Largomanino model 8381 pies, AKC, beaut. marked. I ~;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;·;SI:; metal bed $100. 317 Ramona Chev. Vallant or Dodge i~ e MANAGER e MR. ROBERTS C.Ommunlty Hotpital, 31872 wtnoor S50 belt massager \ 12 Digit wllh 111.pe ToP S200. 842-2903 /I ~P~IA~"'~· ~CM~~~~~~,1 dr. Must be ln lood co.
MENS STORE (714) 828-6610 Coast Hwy. So Laguna 3 spd sro' red bric:k Sc cond J.350 675-6000 • ALA7F""'""=;;'=-,---1campors,S.le/Rent920 dl~ .... ~. or 6'. wut ~ IN L.A.-MR. TERRY 499-1311 ext 356 ea. 642-m't alt 5 & wk p· . /0. 826 SKAN Malamute pups, cas . ~ Mrs. Humphre;y
El(perienced, good ap-(213) 26f..0181 * W AITR ESS-DINNER ends. ianos rgan1 reds, AKC, maJe/te.m. CAMPER -..... 11~1 545-7691. • l
pearance, age 25-35. Good HOUSE Ex 'd food &. CLEA 64.2·3188 IMPORTS WANTED ., potential. Salary plus. Sales . P -WHJTE pedestal fable, 6 RANCE A"'K~C~C.~-7''--~
Call 540-3897 9:30-11 Ar.I, I MANAGEMENT ~ktai~s t-~da wk. S~~~S swiVf!I chairs, Spanish lamp SALE \\'ks. Ch~pi~fine~u~ts~ CLEARANCE SALE ~~gj ~=: I Mon. thru \Vert for appl. SALES views o noon. . & hanging fixture, antique wormed. $100. 842-7279 Antiques/Classics 953 Bil.L MAXEY 'i'oYOTA
OPPORTUNITY SEAFOOD, 16278 Pacific chair, occ'I chair, miscell. Over 100 Pianos & Organs ""~~.::::::.::.::c:::::..,= ·-·' !-II\')'., llunt. Bch. & clothes. 646-7335 Reduced for lmmed. aale. POODLE pups, beaut. little Larae se1ecUon .._ ·n '40 CHEVY delux 4-dr sedan 18881 Beach Bl.Yd. J
EXECUHVE
P~~SON Nl::L
A GENCY
for an arls"wate person 'vithr-~7-c===~~--1-~===~:.::,--~ B N tiny toy & to)'l'i. Stud serv. r .. • Very clean &: xlnt running H_. Beach. Ph. 847-85$
initiative and maturity, to * WANTED * * ANTIQUES. Sat. only. uy ow & Savel All colon. 893-9119 Campers Now Slashed to cond. Sale ·Or trade for :=t"
\\·ork independently with Foreign cal' mechanic w/ 1979 Orange Ave. Open Dally 10 Iii 6 s49 OYll fibel"Kll· dune buggy . WE PAY TOP DOLLAR .
strong support from mi'ffit. own smJ lools. 548·5646 * Costa Mesa. * Fr:. 10·9 * Sun 12-5 DACHSHUND pups mi.n.. ACTUAL 644-1536 FOR TOP USED CARS I
A nalional organization is WORKING mother n<>eds DANISH walnut dlnlng set, COAST MUSIC ~l:~n~kred.& TI4/~01~ fACTOR't' 19'17 HUDSON, 36.000 miles, U ,your car la extra clean,
in seart'h o( a married per. resixinsible to care for 4 hideabed. capt. beds. 966 NEWPORT & HARBOR IHYOICI like new, ttston!d. SllXI. ~ n1 lint. '
son \\'ith a good education pre-school age children, Sandcastle, CdM 644--2196 Costa Meaa * 642-2851 GER~1AN short hair pointer SHOWCASE S48-C75i5 BAUER BUICK
and/or business backgroundl~~L~io~o-~lo~o~•~oo~t.~540-~~16.14~~:liM~ac~h~i~ne;:.ryT';;""37,:~8~16 PRACTICE puppies, AKC reg, Champ DEALERFOR 234 E. 17th SL "'ho is ecOnomically diswrb-sirefi. 67~80i'i Dune Buegl11 956 Costa Mesa. 54$-7'1'5
ed. ~WANTED: 2 or 3 spindle · ORGANS 2 YR . old female Irish Setter ELOOT RAOO CAMPERS (TEN> '10 licensed Calif. WANT late model Ford vii
I -I ~ drill press. must be xlnt Prices you won't believe! ready for brttcting. HEODORE Dune BU&Riff. s!rtet legal, 6 cyl. no junk, please.
This is a career oppor· _ V cond, reuonab1e. 8--5, SR \VARD'S 'BALDWINSJ'UDIO 646-6761 ROBINS FORD lo mi's, flilly equlp 'd . 6~aftu 4p.m.
tunity in a dynamic ~gineerin1. 64z.&l84 . 1819 Newport Blvd, 64U48C e rnJSH Setter puppies AKC 2.060 HARBOR BLVD. Various colors .Your clKllce. Autoa, Import.cf 9Ji
field -creating and A , •-M11c1llaneou5 818 HA.\LY!OND, st e 1 n way . registered . ' COSTA MESA 642.00lO Reduced prices. 644-1408, meeting challenges ntiques ._ Yamaha. New &: Used fr 96s.69'lT * 644--mS3 aft fi pm. · AUSTIN HEA"ow Accounting Clt<k -C H ARTER mombenhip ==-,-:~;::..,.:...,.--1 '68 VW CAMPER '""""'=,;::-=,;=~~~ "'"'11 ~o $&Xl. 1'tin. 2-3 Yrs' exper. daily. SCRAM-LETS ~;~nr.oo'ct~~~~ m ~~ :~:n°~~~~il~~~h:C~: A:;.~~~: ~~he~u:.'ps6 * DELUXE SUNDIAL (X:) bU:e1~c;:'t I~~ '1000=.-3000-M_,u_k_lll..,_ . ..,Cd-,-.. -.. "'.
1n all phases of acclng. A .salary plus substantial membership, All privileges, Music Co., 1907 N. Main, wks. 8l7-548i. * Uke new. New tiger lo mi'•. fully equlp'd . $1400. 5J&ll96 bet 4pm or
Small ~ u t progressive I comn1. toa qualified person ANSWERS $475. 6#-2281. =Sa="='='="""~·~~----a ELEGANT Mghan Pups, paw wide Utt1. Var!OWI colori, Your cbolct, wk end•
mfgrng firm, Beach area. leading to a pennanent sales HOOVER portable v.·asher, STEINWAY Grand $1 8 O O ARC. Blac.k muked silver. * Low miles, new eng, Sl850. ~1408• &U-O'l53 aft DATSUN
I I or mgmt. career. Carpet -Naive -Mount -wed g e w 0 0 d st 0 v e (cost $500()). Shov.·n by appt. 962~956 art 4. * $2500. Pvt Party
6
pm.
Payro I C_lerk All inquiries and interviews Indigo -DRIVE-IN Hide-a-bed loveseat, Misc'. only. 494-5861. H".-,.~.~,'-"----~856= * &f5-2633 aJt 5 pm * 1960 CORVAf.r--
To $500, Responsib!e tor pay· 11·ill be held in strict con-They tell about the dumb 642--0282 ELECTRIC P[ANO PLAYER Make OUer ·DOT DATSUN "' ~~:;: 200. Xln I Newport lldcncc. Send resume to Box trnUic cop .wbo .gave out GREAT. Books of t he AND ROLLS $400. RANCHO Rosalldo, 1'7 5 2 ~r~! ~ts~~m:rT~:: :-:;:,..:,54::6·_:1::81::,7:.•::fl::":....;'.:~_:•:_l ~ OPEN DAILY
· #1077 Santa Ana, Callt twenty parking ticket!! ~· Wesiern World & Compton's * 548-0947 • Orchard Dr, Santa Ana li~ Best oUer. MZ-7974 aft 5 VW dune buggy & trailt:!r, AND
I 92702. fore. he' found out he was in Encyclopedia. Like new, S t • Good 830 Nev.· management, bot 1prn $550,ortradeformotorcycle SUNDAYS .4~0 W. Coast H'('y. Equal oppor. er:nplr. llt/F a DRIVE IN movie. cheap. 546--4737. por ing s 11talls wtattached corrals, ~8.~--~R-----or van.~ 1M35 Cea..b Blvd.
Suite H64 2 N.B. Sales FRENCH: Inlay Semanier, INVALID patient lift Hoyer .270 Remington model 760 1 ,;';;;•'"':;,""''°~';='=U'-' ::.54::;"-.:19::53::...-= CAi'\fPE ' 2 beds, l;e 'T'=r:::u-:Ccki-'1"-'"-'=---.,..,. Hu.nHntton 61!1.t'b
5-716 FUN in r~ashion w /Beeline. commode wfmarhle tops. w/attach. SUS. M 0 b i I e with \l/eaver K-4 scope, SPIRITED IOm'I mare, 4~i ::~SM~ box. $400 or
962
IQ.7181 or ~
*** M S I Xlntearnings. 830-1853 Pr of mirrors & chairs. commode chair $25 Rroiield mounts, 2 el(tra yrs, \J Arab'iqte.$350 '67 159 DalSUD Pl'CkUp '65 Datsun W""M
. OLDER
1
SARAH Coven .... • needs fl. 644-2044 962-6ll6. · clips Sl.25. * 54:>.5175 * OPEN ROAD, c'laslls --=ii-,.
"' TV I '~~~~~~~~~ mount. Self cont. Will take 4 speed d1r Real NI • MUlf. Experienced only, all 3 shifts. or pt time help. No in-RECTANGULAR trunk, 75 AREA rug 7'xW' Karaslan • Radio, tflFI, P/U trade. 67U809 Wlth 48" Pa,rris Vall.ey Camp. · ' OI!.
lt1acGregor Yacht Corp.. \'f'stment. Will train, min years old. $35. w/pad, burnt orange i. Stereo 136 J [~ JP ] ~--------·I et. dlr. Sleeps 4 people, sacrifice! Will trade or fiq.
1631 Placentia, C.:\1. age 20. 53G-1407 & f>ll--9066. 56--0906 khaki. 4 &cl w/fring $50. 20 .. l\fagna\~X conMle, blk Mn8:"'~ le. Cys~:fe~:kes, 925 <YNW287) Will take car in ~:~~~te party. 5t6-l7l6
l\f o I e I ma ids . EX-ST SES ANTIQ. marble top chesl,1~""°=',:.16lo;,,~~----I & whl, Good cood, ?-.1ake '.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;:.:;;;; ,, lt'ade or finance private par.
PERIENCED ONLY. Apply ~ ln~~!M"""n~n:~ must be parlor table, old large NEWPORT Beach TeMis oiler. 548-7116. ~ .. -~ .... ty. Call S4S-8738 or 494-6811 . New '71 Datsun:
in person , Costa i\leS<I Inn, ~1.11 _, p' ~,..... ...., • ornale cash regis. 49!}-36.1.2. Club membership for sale, I :o~=~~-,--=~= Boats/ Marine I ......... -• 1600 OHC, Pickup with camp. CM i '-"· ov.·er sewing ma-Appl. 802 reasonable Aft 6 548--5703 21" TV S21'.l. also 21" TV THINI DUMP TRUCK ' · chine exper req'd. Call Now! 1ances , · •. · . S25. Both in xlnt. cone!. Equip, 904 er. Sale price $2099 dlr.
NEED ~!ORE ,\f0NEY7 ' 9 Ai\l 'til 9 PM. WHIRLPOOL auto wul\'.er', 70 MO~~ Kirby, like new, 6T:>--1763. ?-.1ERCURY outboard and HONDA See at$~)' Pilot (# PL521452210) Will take
Join the succes.s group, ~U ORANGE COAST late model. Xlnt oond, $60. Bargau~ """' ?,...,., * l --.-10~R~C-Acol_o_•_1V_24_"_ J'a1ercury crui.eer pro,,., in-• 330 West Bay Street .. car ln trade. W1ll finance
Shacklee produC'111 to home EMPLOYMENT Also Kenmore combo ....,.,..,..,,.,. S265 strument.s. Jack Cole seats private party, Call 546-8736
& induslrl'.·. Full or pf lime AGENCY washer/dl)'er 120 volt e!ec NEWPORT ~ch _Tennis Call 8934943 with bases, single lever con--'FRIEDLANDER" ~~ c!risa ~'~'-"~'-6811=~.'=~~~-
u.les posn1ons now open.1124 Broadwa C ~f st• 3111 $50. Guar & delivered. Club Membership $350. trols, cables, inboard gas uni NACW (MWT, IPl Mrs. Greenman '69 DATSUN WAGON Interested? Call 499-3954 y, · · :>-546-8672-, 847--8115 Call (1) 811-8436. , k '~ h'el Y-·•1 -ally U"· th'· •••. an s, Wu...,s I ds, ALL 537-6824 e 8!)3.1566 642-4321 vu I ,.. "" IS .....,...
NURSE -Registered. part • GAS dryers le reblt 8' Black naug. sofa, never I!' NEW. 54!HJ530. NEW~USED·SERV. JWL1 llke new! 4 speed, dlr.
time in Pediatric group. Secretary to $550 washers $50. Will de 1 used. $100. Free lo You _ Boats, Power 906 '59 Chevy 4 whl Dr. P/U. R & H. (YWT91T) WUJ take
Send ttsun1e to Box 1728, Fee paid. \l/ork w/V.P. Pre-\v/guar.' Mstr Chg. Maytag (213; 925.3622' I ~------~~~ ~,,.......; ______ ...;.;,_ ~ UW bed, XlnL cond. Call a. trade or finance private
Ne'r"port Beach, Calif. fer Constr/R.E. Type 60, repalnnan. 531-8637. \VE loan-Buy.Sell )"'1\hlng.11 15' Lastron w/50 Mf!rc, less 'OOZ-<""-'"0.:.:1--,,-,---= party, 546-8736 or 494-68ll.
NURSING : ~llet LVN or 1 SH 80. •LATE ?-.10DEL UPRIGl·IT Coalit Pawn & Auction. 2426 4 MIXED breed puppies 2 than 12 hr11, incl trlr. All in 500 cc VELOCETTE Thrux-'62 Chevy % ton P.U.I '68 DA-SUH ll 30 · f Also F Job males, 2 f e m a [ es ex.' J ton, new clutch tires, w/Servls llOdy $ 6 o O. I
RN, 3-: shift 0 r I eep 5 FREEZER, S80 Newport Blvd. 642.$400. ceptlonally cute. 536-4174 3/9 x nl cond. Many xtru. brakes, piston and lower 544-3417 or 838--4792.
medocines. Park Lido Con· I NEW ORT *833-9109* 125;=-===~~~-'--~~-~~-----Priced lo sell immed $1075, _ _, --;;""'""'""'~~'-=..--valescen! Center 642-8().44 Personnel Agency " PROFESS. 1 r Imme r PUPPIES, Mor her Basset 642-9787 Pref eve e..... Purls!'• de:llght and '62 FORD % TON P.U.
1
4 Door. Automatic, •Ir cond
833 D D NB ELECTRIC dryer, Excellent lawn~wer, ~ vacuum, hound, 847--3415 7662 ;:.;;,~,,,;,,o-:c;-""'"-~ in perfect shape. Bt1t oUer F-lOO * SSOO dlr. (WQT U4) WUJ take
NURSERYMAN exper. Sell-over r ., • • conditio n $25. util trailer. Mlle. 646-3333 0 , ..... 0, l!.B. • 319 23' DEEP V au fiberglass over $950. 615-5954 alter 4 ;.,.,., 1.: gen'I v."Ork. 642-3170 * "'-'" ="' """"' wit k 1 · twi' ·-HP * 962-6981 * trade er finance private par. ~06 "'"' n-,24 -n<TJO.r.7 * . RIFLES & shot••""S tor -•e. TURKJSll A'••o•a' wht 6 ........ ea nm, n '""" p.in. I Cal •« ~ 4""" .,..,,., ...... "'111 "6 • '"" 1/0' I nd' trlr A.t.;_,., '57 CH.EV. pickup w/lift gale y, I .,..,,...,,.,., or '71"Q>ll. L A~ GE I u r q_u !1' se 28TI Bayshore Or., N.8. old male kitten. Needs ex· s, a m • ~'6 TACO 22 mini bike Xlnt
OPERATORS. single needle. SERVICE CENTER re[rigera!~r S60. Frigidaire 642-1181 or 6T;,-8680. ceptional home. 546-7308 318 $4800. 496-5270 cond $65. ·66 Y~a 80 f9-5b~~) $750. Ph: 646-2486
1 FIAT
Exp'd only, Gua.J'. plus hii;h Employment Agency "'·asher $4J. ~7820 .63 Sunbeam Alpine mile 1 SO. COAST 18' lnhoard w/many l(tra parts nttd1 I ic~='-~==.,-,~~ ---------·I
piece rale. sv.·imwear. 4001 T G , . · NEED gd home for lovable Lapgtrake \.·amished in. minor work $40. 543J6s9 CMorfPER SPECIAL '66 Chev I - - - - -
"F", Birch, N.B. nr O.C. E auto v."BJher & Uhirlpool body pans. ~11.l male stand. poodle 1 tcrior & deck. $1 500. % T, 4 spd w/shell l(Jnr • - - - -I * Sec'y $650 g~ dryer $35. Guar. & 6424689 yr. 548--0813; !36-4493 3/9 962-8637 ·ro Honda CL 350. Lib new. cond $1500, 548-3261. ' ''THINK"
airporL fr<llll oic Poi&e, top 5k:ills/ dehvtred. 54&-867'2, 347-SllS NE\VPORT Beach rennis 4 ~fo. old pt Be a g I e. 14' Low miluge. Top cond. A
PART time sales opportunlty accept responsibility&: io6d Furniture 110 club full membership for AU1MlNUM boat, 4 sa50. Call Days ( 714) uto Leeslng 964
for 3 licensed Real Estate rapport w/others. sale 962_2270 Adorable 2 males, 2 female :and''.· 1117501.1 ....,~o~~n, Xlnt 684--1941 or eves 642-2678 ~DD'D
iale_sffe!Ople. Pfivite'deek • *Keypunch Opr $4SO MOVING (Transferredlr';;;;;;;';;;:;;;:~7~;;~~~&~m:•:'"':'~·~......,,.=====':"===~~-~-~;:;;;;;::;. Y.y.{AHA 100 twin cyUnder. LEASE . phone. Cail for Interview, lo.fin. 1 exper/to co &: ?.1ed. 9' 1culpl.ured \•rl~et -lUis ap&naion chamben a A NEW l9'll ~, ·s. ~
W. E. Lachenmyer be fit yrs JI sofa & loveseal, 2 matching ruru good. Only ilSO. A.ft PINTO
C
1860
11 .. ~03w9!'"E81•• .. ,~,·~,"n * 'S •• :;, $550 ~'"'· ~:'· ~;t"6'"'~"''•· '.~ STAR GAZEK~~ '•m' 962-819! $50.00 mo. "fRIEDUNDBI'' a .,...,,.. ~ vcs: 1 IT kill SH · / tng B 1 e, pc 00 • ••·a :BrCl.AYJ. "-¥ NE\V '70 Honda SL 350 5000 (38 mo.) 1J7st HACH II.YD.
PART time 1ratnees HS or op 11 s. . " typing dble BR suite, 6 pcs, wh. ~ ~ Ji.. LUM mi's, Dirt & St. Reasonable 1u-. JtJ
C 11 N , Th Zoo constr, R.E., savings&: Joan & gold, Coffee table & com. WM.JI . ·YrNf'DolltActM"ry CvtJ• M sur z;i.~ open end _,.1.;;,"'• ·~-·
0 · 0 exp neo.:. e or 1-elated bckgrnd/plush od p k Q II ij..,: ,, <J,ccordi'!f lo Ill• Stort. "Y" ; Offer. 646-6082. RENT 0
_. ,,.,., ..,,,..,..... Restaurant Coast Hwy & . m es, ecan or oa · ua. · ~ ,. ~... To deve lop message fo< T"••d-, ocr. i1 NEW USED. SERV
Mc
'•ih"' • ofc s/great bosses. ly leather 90(8, 2 matchlna: .. '"T• l l 1966 NO RTON CHOPPER A NEW 1971 • . •
' •u '"· * Steno Recept. $350 <:hrs. Beautiful lamps, pie-~~;'!:!!\; :m~~:'bi.::t~tonumben; 1:1~~ MAKE OFFER l!l!I PINTO • .. - - -•
1 PART TIME, on-call re.lie! Exper.on C'Ordboa.rdllitebut lures, dinette, color TV, ,1 Mab 31To .... 61To 675-2749 or 673-0321. $4 DAY ._ - -----
cashier. 11.21 \V. Coa!l llwy. accur. typing. hide-a-bed, all llkf! new, 21>oy ' 32Stttfol 42!t B.S.A. 650 cc. Excellent om-e FIAT 850 SPYDER e
Newport Beach. *Dental Asst, $450 Everything p $. 832-4i260 3 ~~ :=.Cl'll'9 :!~ dilion, m111t sac:riltce. $350. ANMDILE XlJil' OOND.
X AnsY.-r:ring Sen', mid-F'rnr otc/prtv, dental exper. C0111PLETE twin onk bdrm SAflDI" 35Ccmactt MWlth 1 . 5'1&-1'187 4¢ -$1ll). e e coo.6339
'ot shif1 . Ste11.dy "'Ork. Incl. bkkpng & x.ray, set. 2 oversize chair.i, small GIMl"I ~~ ~~ ~~ '°"7" :¢; 1970 NORTON 750 S Com# PUT A I.J'ITL.E
r._ ·time. 53'-lt&~l *Clerk Typist $325 vin~I drop~~a1r !able, 2 ~;NA.rn := ~~ =~ ~~·,}tu! mando. Xlnt cond. 11200. KICK tN YOUR JAGUAR
PROFESSIONAL phone Cl(( beginning job/min el(per cha.in, meta rame &: box Pef.IUHf 10 , Jo Of ~P"""*""'P , 10 ~ ord. 11 -1!1'! * 642-1769 * LIFE!
110lidtpr • DMa Point, SAn ln typing/outaoingmanner. ipnngs. Round che l'TY'\'OOd li-27. · ll W: ,..,....._ 71Motl., 6-lS.l1-38 , '68 OSSA 250 THEODORE JAGUAR
'Clemente, Capi.strano are&. * Bookk .. P.,r $550 !Jlblt>h,l zig·za, g ~~ .• w,,_i_:,i ·~~= . ·!JZ;r . n= 2~ $.U'i. ROBINS FORD I HEAD"'UARTERS
Work in your O'l\'n home. FIC capability / ability to mac ne, m rrors, ~ 14 """'*" "rn 74 ~ * Call 548-0.1l8 * 2060 HARBOR. BLVD., V Pe~t deal .tn area. Phone work independently/knowi J03" KROt..'"HLER 2 pc IOla. 15~ "5Dcrf 7Slohl"' i cosrA MESA I The only autbortz:ed IACUAR
835.1465 hlltften 9:00 a.m. 01 R.E. or lnvestmentt lleavily woven gretn fabric:, 11~~ -!1~ ~:, '70 HONDA 750 &U-0010 dealer ln tbe entire ffUbcr
and noon . Mlpful, ,.,.ry good cond. $<Ml. 1930 ITtn Aleontum 7fl ~ I "=~Call,:.C._M_5'c_~_!IO!c_-~ "A:::-;::-;-:_;:.=;;.-,-'"""~ Ana
' 2 RM furn apL in Cdi\I in Por1 Seabourne, N. B , <'!!:~!!!~, ~~ ~f':W ~~ 1't1Nl bike, new engine &: uto Servlct, P•rti 966 • Complete
I exch&nie for &erv~ of I 51X1 Nnpott.Omit.r Dr. NB IW'bor VU!w !Jo.mes. UO l -21..._ ~I"""' 11 wo.t. • ~AQUAllUS clutch $50, 8.leytla Slillgnty, l!t.:l9 CAoltLAC -f' 5At.:£$
0
f';
"-oman In owraeelni elder-suite 535 I &U-498l DREXEL mahcJtany poster ~:!1!. ~~-;i~....:W,,, ~ [::._ JA"· 10 S25. 962--4596 TRANSMlSSlON • SEli!VICE
ly eoupl,,, 673--06l1 I bed matcblna <.'Uf'Ytd-front • 4-J.•3-1 "' r~ ~-... M 1=..s 1970 350 lfONDA Scramblr· READY TO TAKE AW\'\'! PARTS
•RN and NURSES AIDES * SERVICE Sta. Pump ts!. al· dnistt A hanrtna mlrT'Or. 1 ..... S7 ;~+: .~~ ::~ 2,000 milt•. Drafted $57. ';:XCELLENT CONDITION BAUE:R
Ex._pt"rienced tendant. Lube room exp. $160. 675--2153 27 P~ '57 ~ 11c..our..· PISCIS cash. Call ~14 I 1st CALLER BUYS CCJ.CJ{
1f 5"~1 * 6p~f~d11.2Not under 20. CdM. LUXURY divan, 6 mo. old. ~:, H~nno ::~:i'r' ''';•'l?:L Moblle Homes 93.S FOR •"'PPO·l11~.l'NT IN
AIL Atgr nttdrd for ';>-"I $550. new, sacrtflcell aoA 60""-i 90Griltd MM.Jt~~ '~'" ·~
oraanlzin1 retAil oullet• for llOUSE Hunllna7 Watch the !ii7-2279 (i}Gool ®Mwm ~N~ 1 _ 10' x 4T-2 BR tumlahtd.
1
1 NEED A 352 or 300 FORD COSTA ~EZA
lri h!u!neaa. &tfHil11 . OPEN HOUSE column. Fer best f'l'rultl! &IJ.fi67S '1 ... $2500. ENGINE 234 E. 17tb Strttt "" ... 646-4065 .. ___ _;5<;:""'°":..:::;;_ ___ , ___ .:.MS-::.:77::63:_ __
> ~·· i
I
DAil. Y PILDT Mond.iy, M..-c.h B. 1911
[ _ ... Wo I~ .__I .. _ ...... _ ... __.!§] l~·_,. ...... _ ... ~l§l I Aulo1 for Sile
970 A-. Import.cl 970 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, UHd 990 1 Autos, Used 990 Autos, UMd 990 Autos, Used 990 Autos, Used 990
VOLKSWAGEN BUICK CHEVROLET FORD MUSTANG PLYMOUTH PONTIAC
'f& XKE Roada:t.r. J ov.·rwr, I
41,000 mile5. $2199. Lie No.
NQS220. m.8222.
LOTUS
'66 LOTUS Elan Coupe. Im·
ma cula.te. Yellow/black.
Low mileage. $2150. ti'ITH1169
MERCEDES BENZ
01 .t!l".JC Coun•y''>
l .1 r ~1t'~! St'l(•lf•On
N,.w & U\ed
1-~ercedrs Benz
J im Sle mons Imps.
•'•.1 1 n e t & Main St .. ,
• ~,.,..,.,~~::::--1-~.,......~~~ '71 SPITFIRES I La1'9• Selection '65 """' Sr><o~t loot '°""' 1968 CAMARO 1969 MUSTANG '" MU.toog Coovt GT, looks but rt11l! good V/8, VI H.T. CPE. FAST BACK V·8 tDLR871J4) WIU.. TRADE
NOW ON DISPLAY Of VW Campers, New tirf"11 & battery. Good NEW TRADE JN MUST co ONE O\\INER 12.IXXI MILES FOR ANYTHING or
Come in for • test drive! I Vans Kombis radlo & heater $550. Ph. Popular burnt orange nni&h This beautiful car was traded VALUF., Xlnt shape, See
FRITZ WARREN'S ' 1 645-2466 "'eekends only. / with black bucket seals, in on a new 1971 Lincoln & at 194) Harbor Blvd, CM.
SPORT CAR CENTER Buses, New & Used '65 Buick Riviera. Full 1 auto trans., radios, heater, rellects that kind of care, LEAVING area, must sell
710 E. l~t St., S.A. 5(7..0764 Immediate Delivery power, $1350, Xlnt cond.1 power steering, Factory Air, a!tractive light tulip yellow '66 Mustang, auto. Air cond:
Open dail~ 9-9: closed Sunday CHICK IVERSON Call ~1-8970 alt 5 pm & clearance priced, CZUM740) wilh black compact Bucket needa paint, Best ol.fer
'64 TRlUl\tPH, new tires, j wknd1 S1775. Johnson & Son, 2626 se1!.15, Auto. Trans., radio, takes. 54&-3735
shocks, batt & top. $300 VW CADILLAC !{arbor Bl., Costa Mesa. hearer, power steering, pow· ·ss MUSTANG
+T.O.P. 642-9597 alt 6 M9-3031 Ext. GS or 61
1
5-10-5630. er brakf's, factory air cond., p/b, air-eond. $;~. ~~j
'" TRIUMPH TR-a HT. l911l ~A MESR sALvo. • '68 Mal1'bu Wagon I 1111 '"";"' whoo•. "'· "" ..,_""· N-paint, rec: eng "'Ork. '-'U.3 • 1o believe how near new. ~~iUSTANG GT. 302 4
Best offer. Eve, 968-726f. '64 VW BUG Cad. '67 Sed DeYiJle 9 Passenger. Fl.Ill OO\\'er + ~RH7?2..!... J:~~·~r.tSon. barrell. Loaded! Im·
VOLKSWAGEN I ::.::' .=•'::. -r ·• ........, ..... · esa, maculate! $1695. 83(}.7556 . ROW 399 >'ACTORY •~ oood. die. Jmmaoulalo! ~ _
--------$799 Affi CONDITIONING I $1695 full price, (XlJ liil 1966 FORD '68 MU5TANG ·.stl.~k, R&H,
'52 vw BUS CHICK IVERSON JUST 37,000 MILES Coll .... ,.,... COUNTRY SQUIRE ""'°"'' ""· """ "'""'
1969 PLYMOUTH
SPORT SUBURBAN
3 Se ¥ St•tion Wagon
$2,39S
383 cu. In., 2 bbl. Engine
Au!omatic transmission
Power ateerlng
Power disc bni.kes
Power rear window
Tilt steerlng wheel
Air conditioning
License "i.'PT 357
Excellent condition
40,000 miles
S<1nt .1Anu 546-41 14
,70 NOVA Must sell $1095. 548-S067 SUNROOF VW Beautiful Normandie blue w/ .r.tU5T SEU
j Ha.rd to find model. immaCU· while top. Blue leather & Station \Vagon. Beautiful arc-'65 Green Mustang
MG late, ttef'nt engine NUV767 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 tapestry in lerior. Full po\\'. VS, automatic, powl'r ,teer. lie white with 2 tone beige. $300 T.0.P. M&.8354
See at the DAILY PILOT,
330 \Vest Bay Street,
Com ~fesa, ask for
l\fargarct Greenman
642-4321 $7'9 1970 HARBOR BLVD. er, door locks, AM/FM ra· ing. dlr. Loaded. (C\IE369) C.Old interior equipped with OLDSMOBILE ---___..,_ CHICK IVERSON COSTA MESA di!>', till & lele.!looPe .steer· Full price $2195. eau 494.n44 auto trans. radio, heater, ~ .. ,68 VW ing. Trunk opener, most all power steering, power brak-,69 Olds. 442 2 Dr. H .T •
•
TMINI vw DOUBLE CAB PICKUP "''"" """· fTYT7'9) '64 IMPALA WAGON I '"· .• ''"'"' • " ""'· ONE OWNER "000 Mt 1969 PLYMOUTH "MG" "' SALE PRICED TODAY p""'"" '""" ,.1 •. <RSK· . . ' . : SPORT SUBURBAN 1970 HARBOR BLVD. VEU-n 9 1875 J h & So Be11ut1lul silver ml.!lt !1n1sh J S I St 1• W
Sn COSTA MESA $1799 Full pol'o'f'r, air oond., wide , . o nson n, it h b d . . ea e ion agon 2626 Harbor BJ., Costa Mesa. w . u~n Y intenor. ' $2,595
.68 vw 1 26 000 ·· CHICK IVERSON ib ovals, dlr. C~'WB54i7) Full ~··o.=-•, E'"_1pped with auto trans., "'FRIEDLANDER'' ' o"·ner, , mis, I ~ $ . 1495 Ca 4"' T144 I ~ -• cocoa mats, w h j t e . w a 1 J e price · II .,... · radio, heater, power slel'r·
tires, auto trans, like new. YW '65 Chevy Wgn 9-pa~ s • j l970 Ford Van E-~ V-3, ing, power brakes, power 383 cu. in., 2 bbl. Engine '893.~C:· l~'i~ $1300. 846-lOTI 549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 AUTMO~l~~~~i"tE~ fNPW411J Air, $10 deliven, auto, R&H, l:'l,000 mt~ Ph: window!. air cond. If you ~utomatic ~ansmission
VW SQBCK '67, xlo't cond. 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 2600 HARBOR Bl., Terms avail, lo mi's, Xln1 S45-l446. are hard to please, don't ower slcering
NEW-USEO.SERV. reblt eng. $l49S. COSTA MESA COSTA MESA shape, &16-9448, or see at I '69 ECONO van, 25,000 mi. mlss this fine car. (Xl.J1l8) Po\\'er brakes, dlsc front ~ 968-5782 i '68 VW CAMPER 540-9100 Open Sunday 19-15 Harbor Blvd, C.;\1 Semi =perT~nve~~ Johnson & Son, 2626 J-larbor ~~:=~ :a~ows
e I '65 CHEVELLE Mahhu SS. 1ape. & .. P. Bl .. Costa J\1csa. :>40-5630 A"tom•· t>" ,...,,.,,1 ,....,.,Mol OPEL vw '69 ""g, '"nrt, lo m;·,, * DELUXE SUNDIAL1 -.~~--. -~~~ " c ~~· '""" xlnt oond. Musi sell best . , . 69 Convertible, I 0 ad e d, v.3 hard top 43,000 m1. '64 FORD XL Galaxie 500 '60 OLDS , 88 Fact air. All Po"'er rear window
olr. Aft 6: ~2476. * Like new. ~ew uger $4200. Can finance, priv P/S, auto, R&H, WsW, l convt, A·1 cond, $550 elec. Xln t cond. 642-5845. j Air conditioning
'64 OPEL KADET $300 ---------paw wide tires. pfY.. San Clemente 714. I O\\'ner. ~S-7~ * 962-4596 * 64.6-1275 aft 5. License xss 453 * 5(8.2861 * '70 VW BUG * Low miles, new eng. 492-2800. '67 Chev. Caprice 2 dr HT, JEEP e OLDS '64, lo mfs, new Excellent condiuon,
'69 Opel Kadett. xln't oond. 217 AGT * $2500. Pvt Party e Jae air, vin'I rf. Lo mi's, fires, 2 dr, xlnt. $600. 41,0(l() miles
$1350. $1699 * 645-2633 alt 5 pm * CAO. '70 one owner. New tires $169,; Call 64fi.J4n 675-2347 G · ~ '59 Chevy 4 Whl Dr. P/U. · ~ Se t the DAILY PILOT . CHICK IVERSON '58 KARMANN hta, new 644-Util bed. Xlnt cond. Call 65 OLDS Sed. A/C, p/s, e a PORSCHE motor, new battery, 5 good '66 IMPALA 2 dr sed, auto 962-4981. p/b, r/h, auto trans. Pvt 330 \Vest Bay Strttt YW tires, Lo mi's, Buy at S450. SEO. 0[ VILLE trans, fact. air, full P\\T,
1
pty. Call 644-1029 Costa J\1esa, ask for
'68 912 TARGA, Xlnt cond,
$4400. Red w/blk inter.
61>2027, 54S-3389
'63 Porsche Super
Cpe. Bahama yellow wlth blk
549.3031 Ext. 66 01• 67 &i6-8289 317 V-8, lo mi's, new tires. LINCOLN 1966 Turonado. 4:>,CXXJ miles. l\1argaret Greenman
l970 HARBOR BLVD. '70 VW BUS: Still under FACTORY $1400. 536-6325 P/b, p/s, air, very nice &12-4321
COSTA MESA warranty. Xlnt Cond, S2950. AIR CONDITJONTNG '64 4-spd, floor 'ihift Impal; 1969 Lincoln 4 Dr. Sdn. car. $1750. 673-4303.
546-4528 Aft 6 p.m. rut.L LEATHER INTERIOR' 327" reblt Muncie trans. JN STCX:K TOO LONG
GHIA Conv. '6!1, auto, radio, Full power incl. door locks, 64~52, ask for Doug. !SACRIFICE) PLYMOUTH '66 SOUAREBACK
tnterior,• AJ\f/FM, cru:ime I AM/FM. Exlnt. cond. Sacri· ;~~ recent en i 1 n e I fice! Will fin. pvt. pty. dlr.
$2399 {RFJ 781). Call P•t 540-3100
low mi's, 1 owner. Very tilt & telescopic steer ing, 67~17 Aft 6 pm.
1
Bc~uliful cameo green finish
Sharp. f1650. 673.7965. vi~yl !?P, stereo, locally CHRYSLER w1!h dark ivy green Jeat~er 1969 PLYMOUTH
VOLVO driven Jewel. t025ADYl & & landau roof, Ju~ury equip· SPORT SATELLITE
J:rlced to sell toda,Y! j pcd throughout. F uJJ power,
1969 PLYMOUTH
CUSTOM SUBURBAN
3 Seat Station Wagon
$2,D9l
CHICK IVERSON I
vw
549-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA MESA
PORSCHE 911·5 1969, !ac.
ai.r. FM radio, all extr1u;
C.Oncours oond. Pri. party
(714) 623-3962
aJt 10 am.
'68 VW BUG
VTS.907
$1299
CHICK IVERSON vw
$2896
1970 VOLVO 144 SEDAN
RADIO, HEATER.
AUTOMATJC, DEMO
•1B71
NOW IN STOCK
~!l-3031 Ext. 66 or 67 1971 142E
1970 HARBOR 3 LVD. 4 SPEED & AUTO;.otATIC,
COSTA MESA I I64 SEDANS
$5888 ' '68 CHRYSLER !aclory air, AM/FM radio,
NO. Vol"y doan. (YCL 150) Two-doo• '°''"· .. Sl,895 31& cu. in., 2 bbl. Engine
Automatic transmission
Power steering
( AUTHO~IZ(D O(AL£R
2600 HARBOR BL.,
('OST A MESA
54(1.9100 Open Sunday
• I
NEW YORKER
4 Dr. H.T. Full powrr equip. I
rnent plus fac1ory 8.Jr condi.
lioning, vinyl root (VID232)
$2495
BAUER BUICK
• .,.,75 J h & So ""'""' 318 Cu. Jn., 2 bbl. Engine ...,,, .• on!IOn n.~At ft 1 · J-larbor Blvd Costa ltfesa. u oma JC ~ansm ssion
540-563{1 ... Power s1eer1ng
"'=;;--;:;--,==~c-cc-:;:IAlr conditioning LINCOLN Contlnental Mark Only 18,oOO ml on engine
Ill. fully loaded. Xln! oond. License ZVE 497
Pv1 ply. $5500. Ph: 675-2308 Excellent condition.
'66 YELLOW Lincoln Cont'l
Power disc brakei;
Power rear window
Air condilioninit
License YPU 440
Good condition, 50.oOO mi.
2 dr, to mi's. See at the DATLY PILOT, See at the DAILY PJLOT.
1967 Pontiac Bonne.
2 DR. H.T.
HARD TO BEWEVE
18000 Ml.
&fore you buy see tb!1 un-
believably fine car. 1'~!1 Jor
any new car Showroom.
Beautiful fine gold mist fin-
ish with matching inter ior le
black landau roof. Fully
power equipped 6 v.·ay seat,
radio, heater. fa ctory air
cond, styled wheel!': w 1 t h
near new Vogue cuslom tir·
e~. See & ask for demonstra·
hon. fVOF670J Johnson &:
Son 26Ji Harbor BJ., Costa
~f PS8. 5'1CJ.56JO.
'67 FIREBIRD
Hardtop. Excellent condition.
dlr. Full price Sl499. Take
small down. <ZR\V889) Will
fin. pvt. pty. Cali M0.3100 or
49-1./..-iOli aft HI anl.
·'67" GTQ·p~,-,~11.-,-. -o~, ~1 ,-1
O\\'nt'r. Less than 40.oi;>o
nli's. 4·spd. Too many cars,
No reasonable offer refused.
673-6a31
RAMBLER
'66 RAMBLER
Convertible, 6 ~yl, auto trans.
Lie. SQK 448. sn5
Harbor American
• t.46-02t.1
1969 HAll~OR COSTA ME~ll.
STUDEBAKER
'62 DAYTONA 2-dr hrdtp,
V8, 4·spd, buck. seats, ti?'f"s
4 mo old, $250. 646-19U
T-BIRD
• T·BIRD '67 LANDAU
LUXURIOUS
:?·DR. HARDTOP
FACTORY
AfR CONDITIONING
Pull power, swing. a · way
s1eering, auto. trans., rad.,
htr. Almost every delll}(e
extra & less than 32.000
ca refully driven Jocal miles.
Absolutely sl'lowroom fresh
inside &: ou,, {UCY007).
SALE PRICED
'SI SC, like new, mwit see.
234 E. 17th St. Call 645-5016 330 "'est Bay Street, 330 West Bay Street,
1963 COUPE de Ville. Xlnt Cost11. f.fesa 54fl-7765 --~====~-I Costa 1\1esa, ask for Costa Mesa, ask for :\._ ~ ••• lftii.:• cond. $950. 17141 :>57Ml736 .69 Chryslrr JOO, 2 rlr HT°. MERCURY Margaret CN'enman Margaret Greenman ~qbe~ -----~~~= Overseas Delivery Spec. '57 vw S199 rNo. PPF1ln SIO
C.ll
646-91JS a.ft 6 delivers, Tenns ava.il. 1!}45
Harbor Blvd, C.~1. 646-SMS.
'68 VW Bus. Xlnt condition.
Sunroof.~.
UIA u.iaa afler 6 fl pwr, fac air, \'in'\ rf, -:-19::7:::D-MA'°"'"R"Q=U~IS'.::""'.C:cP=E-.1 642.4321 642..mt .L~CAD!LLAC
VOLVO • 1970 COUPE de Ville by AM/F'M $2695. 6#-5209 Sl£0\VR00~1 TYPE OF CARI _,========-AUTHORIZED OE.ALE" 19!56 PORSCHE. Body "'-eng.
~· New tra.nl It clutch. µ.u;o. 'Must aell. 557-6981'" 548-1487
pvl "'!,'·,:i',~;, * CONTINENTAL ll,000 MILES '68 Plymo"'h Ro•dnmnoc PONTIAC ~~,!L.,
1 1966 H bo c M 646-93031----~.,----·---------Attractive medium turquoise 426 Hemi. 4-spd. tach
PORSCHE bl ---"-~'·-·-· ----mist finish with while inltr. * 962-0091 * '6.i Catalina sta wag, 6-pass. 540-9100 Open Sunday '67 V\V dlx., bus., facUre t U'U"Ll"UV Cad. '68 1961WHITEcon1inent11 1 I'°'===="""'-,--,.-:-N r· & •-1 • eng., late '69, RfH, $1450. ior & landau root. immacu· '53 PLYMOU'TH 2 dr, black, Pw ires ,,...nery, ugg. ~--------I
I .~1.,.., looks llke new and runs late! Premium equipped orig cond, 19 mpg $200 or -'-;;':;';-k,;1950""'"6#--064,-;-,,:7=--fast results are just a phone '70 91 JT pr pty., ,...,.,.. "°' THllll good
:. '66 V\V BUG, Xlnt rond, ~ 'VOLVO' s d d v·n aulo. trans., am-fm s!ereo Trade. 645-4fig7. Call 642-:>678 & Save! ~'--"~'--•--w.c"'c-".:."'cc..,..,...:..;;•_~~1
. New tires, wht wired in-.. e an e I e 231 Cabrili!37~!rear) Cosla 1 radio, heater, po"·er S(ct'r· Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980 Autos, New 980
Executive car. Many extras. 8-3389 I ing, power brakes, faciory ijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiil ·dlr. Must see to appreclate. ler., S97S. 675-207'1. 54 ' FACTORY 1 Mesa air concl. Truly spolless &
{:AU Tim Tanner 842-4435. '62 V\V 1500 Sed. Xlnt cond, ''FRIEDLANDER" Am CONDITIONING • CORVAJR like nrw 4 near new !ires,
,69 PORSCHE 911_5 SrlOO or offer. Ca1J Vinyl padded lop, tapestry P!C'. See R.· ask for demon· COMET F ~11
Targa. Silver, ;,.spd, mags, 842-8363 1m,mc91Sj1~ Interior, lull power, signal '63 Corvair Monza tEIG82!il, s1r11tion. {916 BEQ). John· or .
Blaupunkt radio. $ 7 2 ;,o .
1
'68 VW Bug, lan, fa(' air, NEW-USE[).SIRV. liteking radio, new tires, Auto, $299, $10 delivers, snn & Son, 2626 Harbor Bl.,
546-SEKll {Linda) S-5 wkdys. U,000 ml'1. 11500. 644--0647 11bsolutely bt>au!ilu!. (YCN · Terms avail. 194;) Harbor I Co~ta Mesa. 540.5630.
s"""'""" '57 ran-." GT '66 VW GHIA ~ 8671· Blvd .• C.M. ll 97D MERC. CONY.
Exceptlclnal cond. Extremely Yellow with Black landau $2999 CORVETIE THE SPORTY ONE
ra.re. Reblt eng, blue ' 1 . a XNH&:l Autos, Used 990 This flashy tulip yellow v.ith
w/black int, continental lop, new va ve Jn iC~ 1962 CORVE'ITE 327 • 4 black top &. inrerior au10-
radia.I tires. Laguna Beach $ 1199 BUICK 6Mqb Ac» speed . tape ~ ~!any exrrai;, mobile has bel'.'n rlriven only
494-4672· CHICK IVERSON .A.~CAOILLAC super sMrp. Arlult O\\'ned. 12.000 miles & must lJE' seen TOYOTA VW '70 BUICK AVTHOl'llZro DEAUll '.\iust sell. Best o I I er & dr1vl'n lo appl"t'ciate. Ra·
2EiOO HARBOR BL., 644-1393 11nyt1n1e. rl10. hea1cr. pov.·cr s1ecring,
TOYOTA NEW '71
NO DOWN
PAYMENT
$69.Dl MONTH *
36 mos. Def. pay price.
. $2484.36 or cash pr 1 c e
$2003.55, incl. Tax & Lie
A.P.R. 14.54%. Serial J\.'o.
lJ.1347.
~9-3031 Ext. 66 or 67
1970 HARBOR BLVD.
COSTA 1\IESA
WANTED
!'I! pay top dollar !or !'OUr
VOLKS\VAGEN' today, Call
and ask Jor Ron Pincbot,
549.3031 Ext. 66.67. 673.Q!lOO.
69 V\~' Sqrbck \Vagon, Auto
1ran.~. $1800, Xlnt cond,
83!1-2!1111
LE SABRE cusro~t COSTA MF.SA I COUGAR powrr brake!i, raclory air
4 Dr. H.T. VS, automatic, R& 541).9100 Open Sunday ---------cond., elc. 4 near ncv.• !ires.
H., power steering & brakes, e '69 Cougar, air cond, vinyl Ask for rlcmonstra!ion. {70.5·
ra.ctory air. factory warran. I top, nC"w 11rcs. lo blue book. AZPl, Johnson & Son, 2626
ty. (557ADN) CAMARO $2300. Call aft 4:30 pm -llarhor Blvd., Costa Mesa.
$3 795 --------1 5~g..31s.1 "'";t"'t).""-.30.,---~o-=-c ... .-
' '69 CA~1ARQ.RS :00, orangt', 1 '67 COUGAR. Air, recent 1969 Marquis 4 Dr . H .T.
BAUER BUICK Clean car, Air rond, elc. I tune-up, 4 new tire11. Good Beautiful award \\'inning styt.
Good tires. 673-5811 milea11:e. $1495. 897.a174 eves u1g a!1rii.ctivc light ivy yel .
234 E. 17th St. ~ CHEVROLET & wknrl~ Jnw l'o'ith dark ivy Ji:reen in·
Costa ~tesa 548-776.l DODGE tcrior black interior & Jan.
•On approved credi! '71 RED VW Camper, right '70 RIVIERA ·~8 ~~~~:.E;~~ ~~!!:up,~~ '67 DODGE MONACO ~:u:~~l~u;~1,r: 1~~~~:.~~.
Bl.II Maxey Toyota "" '"' "'"" s3350. "" s~. ~9153 dys, 536-1222
18881 BEACH BL. S47·R5.l.1 "''<'s.
CUSTOM Rufo," R/H, \V / s / \\. rlio, healer. power steering,
' 675-4819 power hrakl'!i, powpr 11·1n.
Full power, lnctory air condi. · 2 Dr. H.T. Vii, automa11c, ra. rlov.·s. etc. This c.'<ccltent <'ar
tioning, AM-FM fitereo ra. '6;, CHEVY 2 dr Impala 327 dio, hearer, Jlfl\Vf'r stcer1n,i: J'('flt'cls very careful main.
dio, vinyl roof, factory wa.r. eng. $600. & brakl'~. factory air, vinyl tenan<:<!'. Driven only 24 ,000
HUNTING TON BEACH -.,.-. _V\_l'_Sq_"'_"~b~,-,k~.-,-ood~
$2197 rond. $950. Private party.
rant,y, (794AFBJ Call R9J-4943 roof. Low mileage, cs21n1 miles. See & Drive 10 ap. 1970 TOYOTA CORO~A SEO Call 962-8195
RADIO. HEATER. c.6::.i::.V\,,-\:.:',:..no=w'-p-,7;o~t~ba-t "'°bc~k-,. $4295 .64 CHEV. 6 pass. \Vag. Auto $1595 prt'cia1e,' •tondition. (\VYB
AUTOMATIC. DE~10 #7826 . Snow + "'ide tires. Xlnt
cond. $8:75. 642-3926
trans, p / s. Reasonable. !ll11 Johnson & Son, 2626
83.1--0600 aft 6 "'kdys. Harbor Bl., Costa 1\1esa. BAUER BUICK ... IMPALA, '''· ,,,_ BAUER BUICK 5'1).5630 ALL 19TI 'S IN STOCK
~fKJI CORONA • COROLLA
.-De.rutlewi& W TOYOTA
iool 'ltarbor, C.!-of.
BEST BARGAINS
COME SEE OUR
SELECTION or
TOYOTAS
Jim Siemon• Impor ts
140 W. W a rn1 r
Sa nta Ana
Op.in Eves. & Sun.
_ 1 ___ .:540-4c.:...:.1.:2.:.s __ _
'69 VW BUG
zvc 708
$1599
CHICK IVERSON vw
2:H E. J71h St . 20,600 mi's. Li!<f' n<'W, 1 234 E. 17th St. --~==~~,--
Costa Mesa 548.7765 OwOl'r. Call 673-3739 Cosla ~leSA !»8-776;; MUSTANG
'68 BUICK STATION"''"'"·'".'""'·'"'· 1 DODGE I• '68 G•"'n "USTANG I~~~~~ & !railer hllch. CONVT, R/H. PIS & auto
SKYLARK CUSTOM S>5o. • '69 CHARGER I '""" "'"'· >I0-'9M. 2 Dr. H.T. VS autom11Hc, R& '70 Cl!E.V NOVA, Hirbo h..v· 'iO r.1USTANG 13.IXMI mi.
549-'3031 Ext. 66.or 67 R 1 ·• • b k .dromahc, p1vr strg ''tnYi I ·1 ~ XI d II • powl!'r s ee_nng ra es, 1 Af ~ 49-l-5..q.2 · VS, autor'nallr, rarlio, hcatrr, 3:i -4 St"" nt ~n . A 1970 HARBOR BLVD, factory air, vinyl roof, buck· , op. t '' •. ,, • powrr steering & brakl's, rxt1·11s. Jim s.ID--106:l.
COSTA MESA et seats. (WEF197) 68 ~HEVY ;'•lalibu, auto, 6 ft:rtory alr, vinyl ronf, }ow J .65 Mustang 6 c-yl. J spd.
\l\V Van ronvcrte<l to camper $1995 cyhnrle~, Xlnt rond. PIS. milrs. faclory warranty, nrw trans. gen. reg. clutch,
by Sun Dial. Eltt ttrlig, ~'l0-73!l> {074BS\\11 j SS25 675-1(}1:>.
r;ueen-sizr bed, etc. Mag. '!\j Jtll PALA SS. 4 S"""'rl. $2595 ==c-::;c:c::-::;:-==:::: ·a1 BAUER BUICK ,,.. TIRED of that old furniture? 11·h!~. big tires. spcc1 Mags. Gl'n. stisp, Headen,
pain!. Cor,.air engine. Only I 234 E. 17th St. I.es~ eng. 673-1017 It's really no! that hard
-IXXl · · I t BAUER BUICK to ~lsce. J u!lt watch the .1, m1 since con1p e e Costa 1\-lesa 5'18.7765 --. ·~ \VAGON • lw-11,,.. • mi~-lla"""·•s rebuild, Cha~il ir a '59. J... -i "" " "'"" ·~ ...
bu! we have $5000 invested. 'JO BUfCK ESTATE 4 ~r. 6 cyl, 3 spd. 234 ~. 17th S1.. •
1
columns in the Classitied BILL MAXEY :O.lu~t ~e & drive to ap-S\2.1 flR;\l 54~1&.lO _ Costa ~1eS11 .,.1~~1 Scctk>n. ~rec111f~. S:lSOO firm. 1~:1:' \VAGON Autos, New 980 j Autos, New 980 .A o-.~ •• -,-.~N~.-w---~
ITIOIYIOITiAIA · !('lnrovia. N.8 . 646-44~ V8, automali-:, p S. P.B., ra. --;.;;:::::;::=;;;;~~~iiiriiF.~~~iiiii~;;i~;---
• ~ =="" •. lg dll~~ nnl,\ I d.Jo, heater, factO'ry &II', 9 INST
1111) IEACH BLVD. '61 V,,. BOBTAIL PA&s. factory \\'arren1y. Low
S3iS mUeeQ:e. CZB&t32J
Hunt. Boodt 147.a.!SJ t "l->1tl • <A795
lmlll,ot<»ootffwY.'"'Bdl '69 Vw FASTBACK _,..
,'68 Corona Hardtop I ,~,~~,;n I BAUER BUICK
-· Bl&&-...,,.. t,p. -CHICK IVERSON '. 234 "· ,,.,,,... .
Automl'tic. radio, hea1er. VW Costa l\feu 548-776.)
(VWN 748) Ta.kt small dov.'?I. '67 RJVJERA, full power fact
Will finlnce pvt. pl)'. Call ~3031 Ext. 66 or 67 air, MlcheHn fin!!!, scrf'f!O
a!t 10 am 4!H.7!iMi er 540·3100 1970 HARBOR BLVD. 111.,.. $200S. 5.'i7-m77.
LEASE A NE\V '71 TcyolA cosrA ?>tESA ·~ BUJCK R1vif'ra , full pwr.
for only $49.98 mo. wfth just '65 VW. rtblt l"fll, new qijAll· air cond. I m m a cu J a t e .
S99.9S + 1,.lc. ty paint. lA!'t Wk price. I S1150. 6<t4"4i248
SIU. MAXEY TOYOTA I &4z..3.151A, 642-5-Mi.1 '64 BUICK LeSabre, 42,000
1!881 Beach 81. Sell Idle Item• no~'l · I mi'1, 1 O\\'rmr. itlr, XtrA~~'
t 0-!~l Huntlngton Beach Call 642-5678 No"'' 1 :dnl S92S. 64S-2057
'· i .
THANK YOU!
FOR BllYING 63 CARS ANO TRUCKS
-THIS LAST WEEKEND • •
Also
For The Biggest Month Since We Opened.
NOW TRT OUR SERVICE
SUNSET FORD
I
Lincoln Mercury's All New Sub Cornpact
BRANO
NEW '71 COMET 2 DR.
6 Cy!., rad io, heater , white sidewall ti res, fu lly factory equi pped.
Se•ial '#I Kl I U53284q
MHCUIT
FULL
PRICE
JOHNSON & SON-
LINCOLN CONTINENTAL e MARK Ill e MERCURY e COUGAR
2626 HARBOR BLVD., COSTA MES A ,
r I I